“All Israel Shall be Saved”: A Good Friday Meditation on Why the Jewish People are Not to Blame for the Death of Jesus
Perhaps you have had the privilege of attending a Passover meal put on by Jews for Jesus. They show how the symbolism of the Passover is fulfilled in Jesus Christ. Of course, the Messianic Jews – Jews who believe in Jesus as Messiah – are a small minority of all Jews living today. As in the days of Paul the Apostle, so today most Jewish people reject their own Messiah. Paul struggles with this distressing reality in Romans 9-11.
If you go on the internet and search for Jesus as our Passover Lamb, you might stumble across a website of an organization called “Jews for Judaism,” which is a rather strident organization that strives to counter messianic organizations like Jews for Jesus. They claim that Jesus is not the Passover Lamb, and that Christians are hijacking their Scriptures by claiming that he is.Paul and the other Jewish apostles argued for a messianic interpretation of the life and work of Jesus and many first-century Jews both in Jerusalem and from the Diaspora agreed with him. Click To Tweet
This claim has been echoed by many liberal theologians and biblical interpreters and it has become fashionable over the past 75 years to claim that Jewish people do not need to hear the gospel because they can be saved apart from believing in Christ. (This is sometimes referred to as “two covenant theology”). It is also common to hear that Christians need to repent of the persecution of Jews throughout the history of Christendom. To affirm that Jewish people need to believe in the Jewish Messiah is said to be supersessionism, which is the idea that Old Testament Israel has been set aside in favor of a Gentile Church in the plan of God.
It is certainly true that Christian persecution of Jews over the past two millennia is something dark and evil and that we should repent of it. It is not right, however, to go so far as to infer that the apostles were wrong in supposing that Jewish people do not need the Gospel of the Messiah. The “great sorrow and unceasing anguish” (Rom 9:2) Paul felt about the rejection of the Messiah of Israel by the majority of Jews in his day was rooted in Israel’s prophetic tradition that laments Israel’s disobedience and refusal to believe in the LORD’s provision.
When, for example, Isaiah pens a lament about the coming desolation of exile in Isaiah 6:11-12, he also includes a word of hope about the “holy seed” (Isa 6:13). Isaiah preached judgment in the short to medium term coupled with hope in the long term. Paul does the same with his talk of a mystery in which a spiritual hardening has come upon Israel until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in. (Rom 11:25). What exactly he means by his declaration that “all Israel will be saved” (Rom 11:27) has been debated for a long time. But it certainly is not as simple as saying that Israel is set aside, and a Gentile church takes her place. Nor can it be that Jews have no need to believe in Messiah Jesus. Neither supersessionism nor a two-covenant theology is nuanced enough to express the mystery here, which is eschatological.
In 1 Corinthians 5:7b, the Apostle Paul writes: