What Is Meant By Israel?
William Hendriksen*
According To Scripture, What Is
Meant By "Israel"?
Is It True That The Blessings
Promised To Israel Are For The Jews, Not For The Church?
A recent issue of a religious periodical contains the statement: "It
seems evident that there is no reason to speak of the church as
Israel."
Language of this kind has been heard before. In a thesis for the
Th.M. degree, written many years ago, the writer of this treatise
has quoted a good many statements by various authors who take this
position.1
Is there any truth in it? There is, indeed, some, but the
proposition needs to be carefully qualified. It is true that it is
wrong to identify Israel, that is, the Jews considered as an ethnic
entity, with the visible church of the new dispensation, or with the
invisible church of either or both dispensations. There are numerous
passages in the Old Testament in which the term Israel refers to the
Jews as a nation or people, a theocracy. We read that the children
of Israel murmured against Moses and Aaron in the wilderness (Exod.
16:2); that a census was taken of the people of Israel (Exod.
30:12); that the people of Israel were made to drink the pulverized
golden calf (Exod. 32:20); that the people of Israel offered
willingly to Jehovah (Exod. 35:29); that the Lord gave his statutes
and ordinances to Israel (Ps. 147:19), and so forth. The Old
Testament contains divine promises which, in their literal
application, were meant for the Israelites, that is, for the Jews.
Blessings of a temporal character are promised to Abraham; for
example, "To thy seed will I give this land" (Gen. 12:7). Also, the
promise of Israel's return from captivity was meant and fulfilled
literally, as has already been indicated.
In the New Testament this literal usage of the term Israel
continues. Thus, for example, the statement that an angel of the
Lord tells Joseph to return with his family, from Egypt to "the land
of Israel," does not mean that he must go to "the land of the
church." The land of Israel is, of course, "the land of the Jews."
See also Matt. 2:21; 8:10; 9:33; Luke 4:27; 7:9; John 3:10; Acts
2:22, 36; 3:12; etc.
But alongside of this literal use of the term there is, from the
beginning, also a figurative use. Those who say, "the church is not
Israel" frequently fail to give this fact its due. Yet the very
first occurrence of the term "Israel" in Scripture already implies
that a true Israelite is not a person who belongs to a certain
nation, or one who is able to trace his ancestry to Abraham, but
rather a person who prevails with God and with men (Gen. 32:28).
Note also Psalm 73:1, "Surely God is good to Israel, even to such as
are pure in heart"; and Psalm 125:5, where the term "Israel" is
contrasted with "those who turn aside to their crooked ways." We are
told that Jehovah will lead the latter forth with the workers of
iniquity. There follows, "Peace be upon Israel." Moreover, even the
land promised to Abraham typifies Canaan above (cf. Heb. 11:10, 16).
The seed in which all the promises are focused is Christ (Gal.
3:16).
It is precisely in harmony with such figurative usage that Paul in
Gal. 6:16 pronounces peace upon "the Israel of God," a passage that
has already been explained. See Chapter III. That the apostle is not
thinking solely of Jews when he uses the term "the Israel of God"
follows also from the immediate context (verse 15), which reads:
"For neither is circumcision anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new
creation." The one and only thing that really matters, says Paul as
it were, is "the new creation," the life of regeneration which the
Holy Spirit brings about in a person's heart (cf. John 3:3, 5; Rom.
2:29). "Faith working through love" (Gal. 5:6) is what counts, not
whether a person happens to be Jew or non-Jew. Cf. I Cor. 7:19; II
Cor. 5:17. Hence, for Paul the church, consisting of Jews and
Gentiles who have accepted Christ as their Lord and Savior, is
indeed Israel. We see, therefore, that the proposition, "The church
is not Israel," is too absolutely, too bold. As Paul sees it, the
dividing wall between Jews and non-Jews has been broken down through
the blood of Christ (Eph. 2:14). The two former mutual enemies have
been "reconciled in one body to God through the cross" (Eph. 2:17).
What right have we to rebuild the dividing wall?
According to Paul not all the descendants of Israel (Jacob) are
truly Israel (Rom. 9:6; cf. I Cor. 10:18). Not all are included in
"all Israel." See Chapter III on Rom. 11:26a. Not all who are named
Jews, after Judah, are true to the implication of that name (Rom.
2:28, 29, with a play on the name Jew; cf. John 5:41-44). Not all
are those whose praise is from God. Moreover, there are descendants
of Abraham who, like Ishmael, were born after the flesh, and there
are others who, like Isaac, were born after the Spirit (Gal. 4:29).
But one does not even have to be a physical descendant of Abraham to
belong to "the Israel of God" (Gal. 6:16; cf. Rom. 9:24). John the
Baptist, too, was fully aware of the fact that physical descent from
Abraham does not guarantee being a true son of Abraham. But he also
knew that apart from such descent God can give sons to Abraham
(Matt. 3:9; Luke 3:8).
Now if, therefore, the unqualified statement, "The church is not
Israel," is an error, then it is also wrong to affirm, without
qualification, that the blessings promised to Israel are not for the
church, only for the Jews. The view that blessings formerly promised
to the Jewish people are now given to "the Israel of God," namely,
to the church of Jew and Gentile, is in harmony with Christ's own
teaching. He taught that the privileges which once belonged to the
ancient covenant people have been transferred to this new nation.
This is the nation that brings forth the fruits (Matt. 21:43). Many
will come from east and west, and will sit down with Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven; but the sons of the kingdom will
be hurled into outer darkness (Matt. 8:11, 12). The vineyard is
leased to other tenants (Matt. 21:41). When the invited guests
slight the invitation, others from everywhere are brought in (Matt.
22:1-14).
Similarly, Paul plainly states that distinctions pertaining to race,
social position, degree of culture, and/or sex, no longer have any
significance: "If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham's seed,
heirs according to promise." "Christ is all and in all" (Gal. 3:28,
29; Col. 3:10, 11). Peter stresses the same truth by saying, "You
are [God's] elect race, royal priesthood, holy nation, own people"
(I Peter 2:9). In other words, the old titles once given to the
covenant people of the old dispensation now belong to you.
No one surely will deny that every spiritual blessing is promised to
the church (Eph. 1:3). That church is Christ's bride (Eph. 5:23, 27,
32). And that bride is at times likened to a beautiful city,
Jerusalem the Golden (Rev. 21:2). Yes, the bride is the city (Rev.
21:9, 10). Moreover, upon the gates of that city are written the
names of the twelve tribes of Israel, and upon its foundation-stones
are inscribed the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb (Rev.
21:12, 14). Is not this the same as saying that all these blessings
are now being bestowed upon the one universal church, the church
into which elect from every nation are gathered?
The fact that one day Israel would include the elect from the
Gentile-world and that in this world-wide "Israel" God's promises
would be fulfilled had already been revealed to the prophets, though
not as fully as it was made known to Paul, and so forth, later on
(Eph. 3:1-6). The restoration of "the preserved of Israel" (Isa.
49:6) is fulfilled when the gospel is brought to the Gentiles (Acts
13:47). The enlargement of Zion's tent (lsa. 54:1-3) is fulfilled
when the Gentiles accept Christ (Gal. 4:27). The new covenant
promised by the Lord through his servant Jeremiah (Jer. 31:31-34) is
the one which guarantees complete salvation to every believer -
whether Jew or Gentile - through simple faith in Christ, apart from
all ceremonial ordinances (Heb. 8:8-12; 10:16-20). The symbolism of
Ezekiel's healing waters (Ezek. 47; cf. lsa. 44:3; Zech. 14:8) is
fulfilled on the day of Pentecost when the Holy Spirit is poured out
(John 7:37-39). The prediction according to which those "not pitied"
would one day be "pitied," and those who had been called "not my
people" would be called "my people" (Hos. 2:23; cf. 1:9, 10) was
fulfilled by means of the establishment of the church, considered as
the body of those who are called, not from the Jews only but also
from the Gentiles (Rom. 9:24-26). The raising up of David's tent
(Amos 9:11 ff.) is fulfilled when God visits the Gentiles, to take
out of them a people for his name (Acts 15:14 ff.). It is clear,
therefore, that there is a sense in which it is entirely proper to
say, "The blessings promised to Israel are for the church."
In other words, when a prophecy is destined to be fulfilled in the
new dispensation it is fulfilled according to the spirit of that new
era. Hence, these Old Testament prophecies are fulfilled in the
Spirit-filled church, and there is not the slightest indication
anywhere in the Old or New Testament that at some future time the
clock will be turned back. Let us begin to breathe the air of the
new dispensation. Let us live and think as New Testament people
should live and think. Not "Back to Jerusalem!" should be our
slogan, but "From Jerusalem into all the world!"
Notes
1. See The Premillennialistic Conception concerning Israel
and the Church, a copy of which was placed in Calvin
Library, Grand Rapids, Mich.
* This article was taken from Dr. Hendricksen's book Israel in
Prophecy, (Baker: Grand Rapids, chapter IV, pp. 53-57)
Author: Dr. William Hendriksen held degrees from Calvin
College (A.B.), Calvin Seminary (Th.B. and Th.M.), and Princeton
Theological Seminary (ThD). He served as pastor several
congregations of the Christian Reformed Church from 1927 to 1942. He
also held the position of Professor of New Testament Exegetical
Theology at Calvin Seminary. He authored many books, among them were
The
Covenant of Grace, The Bible on the Life Hereafter,
The
Sermon on the Mount, More than Conquerors, Bible
Survey, and the most popular, The New Testament Commentary
series.