Wednesday, March 29, 2017

An Analysis of Paul’s Olive Tree Parable

Romans 11:13-24 (CLNT)
13 Now to you am I saying, to the nations, in as much as, indeed, then, I am the apostle of the nations, I am glorifying my dispensation,
14 if somehow I should be provoking those of my flesh to jealousy and should be saving some of them.
15 For if their casting away is the conciliation of the world, what will the taking back be if not life from among the dead?
16 Now if the firstfruit is holy, the kneading is also; and if the root is holy, the boughs are also.
17 Now if some of the boughs are broken out, yet you, being a wild olive, are grafted among them, and became a joint participant of the root and fatness of the olive,
18 be not vaunting over the boughs. Yet if you are vaunting, you are not bearing the root, but the root you.
19 You will be declaring, then, "Boughs are broken out that I may be grafted in."
20 Ideally! By unbelief are they broken out, yet you stand in faith. Be not haughty, but fear.
21 For if God spares not the natural boughs, neither will He be sparing you!
22 Perceive, then, the kindness and severity of God! On those, indeed, who are falling, severity, yet on you, God's kindness, if you should be persisting in the kindness: else you also will be hewn out.
23 Now they also, if they should not be persisting in unbelief, will be grafted in, for God is able to graft them in again.
24 For if you were hewn out of an olive wild by nature, and, beside nature, are grafted into a cultivated olive tree, how much rather shall these, who are in accord with nature, be grafted into their own olive tree!

Paul evidently didn’t see it necessary to explicitly interpret each of the details of his olive tree parable for his readers. It should, therefore, come as no surprise that a number of different interpretations have been suggested and defended over the centuries by students of scripture. While this fact shouldn’t dissuade us from trying to come to as accurate of an understanding of Paul’s parable as we can, it does cast some doubt on the possibility that any definitive and conclusive exposition on this subject will ever be put forth. Nevertheless, I hope my own contribution to the ongoing scriptural discussion of what, exactly, Paul intended to convey through this intriguing parable will be found helpful by some readers.

The Natural and Wild Olive Boughs

I’ll begin my analysis of Paul’s parable by considering the identity of the “natural boughs,” since they seem to be the least controversial element of the parable (we’ll consider the identity of the “wild” olive bough at the end of this section). Quite simply, the “natural boughs” of the parabolic olive tree collectively represent the nation of Israel, as a whole. This can be inferred from the fact that the two general categories into which the natural boughs are divided in the parable (i.e., those that are said to have been “broken out”/“hewn out” of the olive, and those that were allowed to remain in the tree) represent the two general categories of Israelites referred to by Paul earlier in this chapter. These two categories of Israelites represented by the “natural boughs” of the olive tree collectively constitute “all Israel.”

In Romans 11:7-8 Paul referred to the unbelieving Israelites of his day (who were in the majority) as simply “Israel,” and contrasted this larger group with another, smaller group of Israelites whom he referred to as “the remnant” and “the chosen.” The “rest” (i.e., the majority of Israelites constituting the nation of Israel) are said to have been “calloused” and given “a spirit of stupor, eyes not observing, and ears not to be hearing, till this very day” (from the context, it is evident that this “calloused” condition was one in which an Israelite had been made insensitive and unreceptive to the truth concerning Jesus’ identity as the Christ and the Son of God). That both the “calloused” majority and the “un-calloused” remnant together constitute “all Israel” is evident from Romans 11:25-26 (where we’re told that “callousness, in part, on Israel has come,” and that – after the time of callousness on part of Israel has ended - “all Israel shall be saved”).

So, the “natural boughs” that were “broken out”/“hewn out” of the “cultivated olive tree” are to be understood as representing the majority of those Israelites constituting the nation of Israel (and what could be referred to as “non-remnant Israel”). Again, it is this category of Israelites that is referred to by Paul in Rom. 11:7 as simply, “Israel” (cf. Rom. 9:27, 31; 10:19, 21; 11:2). Moreover, it should be noted that Paul was not saying that individual boughs represent, or are to be equated with, individual persons (that is, we aren’t to understand one “bough” as representing Peter, another as representing John, another as representing James, etc.). Rather, the broken-off natural boughs collectively represent a single category of Israelites (the majority of Israelites constituting Israel, who were in unbelief), while the natural boughs that remained in the tree collectively represent the chosen, believing remnant. The broken-out natural boughs represent the “part” of Israel that was calloused (“non-remnant Israel”), while the natural boughs that remain in the olive represent the “part” of Israel that wasn’t calloused (“remnant Israel”). Thus, figuratively speaking, the nation of Israel is what “branched out” from the cultivated olive tree.

That all of the natural boughs of the tree collectively represent the nation of Israel (and are themselves divided up into two separate categories of boughs) is a key point to keep in mind, because Paul does something rather unexpected with regards to how he represents the “nations” in this parable. It is, perhaps, the unexpected nature of this representation that has caused most readers to overlook it (indeed, it’s something I overlooked myself, up until relatively recently). Rather than representing the nations as multiple boughs from an “olive wild by nature,” Paul represents the nations, collectively, as a single wild olive bough that had been grafted in among the remaining natural boughs. This is evidenced by Paul’s consistent use of the second person singular “you” (or “thou”) rather than the second person plural “you” when addressing the “wild olive branch” (beginning with v. 17 and continuing to v. 24).

Paul’s use of the singular “you” is, unfortunately, not as obvious in most English translations (including the CLNT), but the Greek is unambiguous here. Although Paul could’ve easily used the second person plural “you” when addressing the wild olive bough (making “it” multiple boughs), he didn’t. Instead, the wild olive bough is always referred to as “you” (singular) while the multiple, hewn-out natural boughs are always “they” (plural). Thus, when Paul wrote, “yet you, being a wild olive,” he wasn’t addressing any one individual gentile - whether actual or hypothetical - but rather the single wild olive bough that represents the nations as an entire people-group distinct from the nation of Israel (we’ll return to this important point when we consider what it means for the wild olive bough to “stand in faith,” and for it to be “hewn out” of the cultivated olive tree due to its not “persisting in God’s kindness”).

The Root of the Olive

Thus far we’ve seen that Paul’s olive tree parable involves a “cultivated olive tree” from which natural boughs were hewn out, and a single “wild olive bough” that has been grafted in among the remaining natural boughs. The natural boughs that were hewn out of the olive tree can be understood as representing calloused, non-remnant Israel, the remaining natural boughs represent the chosen Jewish remnant, and the engrafted wild olive bough represents the nations, collectively.

Now, in v. 17, Paul wrote that the wild olive had become “joint participant of the root and fatness of the olive.” This brings us to the subject of the “root” (which has proven to be more controversial among students of scripture than the identity of the boughs). Before I suggest what the “root” likely represents, it should be noted that, when Paul referred to the “root” of this figurative olive tree, he may have had in mind both the part of the tree that is underground as well as what we’d call the “trunk” of the tree from which the branches grow, and into which shoots could be grafted (see Isaiah 53:2 for an example of this “broader” meaning of “root”). In any case, Paul only explicitly mentions the boughs, the root and the “fatness” of the tree, so these are the only elements of the parable that we need concern ourselves with.

Although Paul doesn’t explicitly tell us who (or what) is represented by the “root” of the “cultivated olive,” I think that the most likely and contextually-informed view is that it represents the patriarchs of Israel (i.e., Abraham, Isaac and Jacob). In v. 16, Paul introduces his parable with two illustrations, both of which can be understood as representing the relationship that the “fathers” of Israel have to the Jewish nation. The first illustration is that of a whole batch of dough (or “kneading”) being consecrated, or made holy, by virtue of the “firstfruit” of the grain harvest being offered to God (Num. 15:17-21). In the second illustration (which leads directly into the olive tree parable), the boughs of a tree are said to be holy (set apart or consecrated) by virtue of their having a holy root. This imagery seems to correspond well with the relationship that Abraham, Isaac and Jacob have to the nation of Israel. Having existed prior to the emergence of the nation of Israel but also inseparably connected to it as its “holy source,” the fathers of Israel are good candidates for the “root” in Paul’s parable.

The broader context of the parable (chapters nine through eleven) seems to support this view. Paul had previously made reference to the “fathers” of Israel in Romans 9:5 and even referred to each of the patriarchs by name in verses 6-13. Most significant, however, is what Paul went on to write in Romans 11:28 concerning those Israelites who constituted the calloused, “non-remnant” part of the Jewish nation: “As to the evangel, indeed, they are enemies because of you, yet, as to choice, they are beloved because of the fathers.” This strongly suggests that the “root” of the “natural branches” in Paul’s parable represents the fathers of Israel. Just as the hewn-out natural branches remain “holy” (or set apart by God) by virtue of their having grown from a tree with a holy root, so the unbelieving, non-remnant part of Israel remains “beloved because of the fathers.”

Notice, however, that the same thing is not said concerning the nations or of the “wild olive” bough that represents them. The nations are not said to be “beloved because of the fathers” (since they do not bear the same relationship to the fathers as does the nation of Israel), nor is the wild olive bough said to be “holy” (either before or after being grafted into the cultivated olive tree). And unlike the “natural boughs” that were hewn out, there is no indication that the wild olive bough will ever be grafted back into the cultivated olive tree after it has been hewn out (it’s being grafted into the cultivated olive tree is said to be “beside nature,” since it doesn’t naturally belong to the tree, as do the “natural boughs”). Although it benefits from the “root and fatness” of the cultivated olive while grafted in, it does not bear the same “natural” relationship to the root as do the other boughs.

This is a key point to keep in mind, for there are some who have mistakenly believed and tried to argue that the grafting of the wild olive bough into the cultivated olive tree represents gentiles becoming Israelites. However, a wild olive bough would not lose its identity and cease to be a wild olive bough simply by virtue of being grafted into a cultivated olive tree; although it would begin receiving sap (and thus life) from the tree into which it was grafted, its inherent “wild” nature would remain unchanged. It would continue to have the same nature as the wild olive tree from which it was cut (just as the “natural boughs” would remain such even after being hewn out of “their own olive tree”), and it would continue producing the same kind of leaves and fruit that it would’ve produced had it never been hewn out of its parent wild olive tree.

Given this fact, Paul shouldn’t be understood as implying that some or all of the gentiles represented by the wild olive bough had somehow become Israelites. But if that’s not the case, then what truth is being figuratively represented by the wild olive bough’s being grafted into the cultivated olive tree? This question brings us to the subject of the “fatness” of the olive.

The Fatness of the Olive

If the “root” is best understood as representing the fathers of Israel (Abraham, Isaac and Jacob), then a natural interpretation of the “fatness” of the root (i.e., the sap by which the branches are nourished) is that it represents the covenant promises that God made to the fathers. “Fatness” implies blessing, and, of course, the promises made to the fathers involved certain blessings.

If this is the meaning of the “fatness” of the root, then we can see the following picture begin to emerge: the nations, collectively, had been placed into a position of favor and blessing in which they were given direct access to (and began receiving blessing by virtue of) the promises made by God to the patriarchs. Just as the wild olive bough is said to have been grafted in “among” the remaining natural boughs to become “joint participant of the root and fatness of the olive” (v. 17), so the nations, as a people-group distinct from Israel, had been placed in the favored and privileged position of being able to receive blessing that is associated with the promises made to the fathers just as directly as the believing Jewish remnant.

This means that the promise-based blessing made available to the nations has to be understood in such a way that, although closely associated with the fathers of Israel, it could be received by the nations apart from the mediation of Israel (the natural boughs). That is, it would have to be a blessing that the nations, collectively, were able to receive apart from its having to come to them through the nation of Israel. This is in stark contrast with what we find prophesied concerning Israel’s role and status during the eon to come. According to Israel’s “prophetic program,” the holy nation will function as a “royal priesthood” in relation to the rest of the nations, and will be the channel through which the nations receive spiritual blessing. As was the case before and during Christ’s earthly ministry, salvation will, after Israel has been restored to her place of national privilege, be “of the Jews” (John 4:22). Thus, the state of affairs represented in Paul’s olive tree parable (in which the nations are able to receive blessing apart from the mediation of Israel) is not something that any Israelite - whether unbelieving or believing – would’ve expected to take place.

But what blessing(s) did Paul have in mind as being made available to the nations apart from Israel’s mediation? An examination of the promises made to the patriarchs reveals the nature of the promise-based blessings which are available to the covenant descendants of Abraham. But did Paul have anything to say concerning a blessing (or blessings) that (1) had become available to the nations in his day apart from the mediation of Israel, and which (2) was/were “contained” within the promises that God made to the fathers of Israel? Yes, he did. In fact, Paul had a lot to say about this blessing earlier in Romans, as well as in his letter to the saints in Galatia. In Galatians 3:5-9 and 13-14, we read:

“He, then, who is supplying you with the spirit, and operating works of power among you-did you get the spirit by works of law or by the hearing of faith, according as Abraham believes God, and it is reckoned to him for righteousness? Know, consequently, that those of faith, these are sons of Abraham. Now the scripture, perceiving before that God is justifying the nations by faith, brings before an evangel to Abraham, that ‘In you shall all the nations be blessed.’ So, that those of faith are being blessed together with believing Abraham…Christ reclaims us from the curse of the law, becoming a curse for our sakes, for it is written, Accursed is everyone hanging on a pole, that the blessing of Abraham may be coming to the nations in Christ Jesus, that we may be obtaining the promise of the spirit through faith.

In light of what Paul wrote in the above passage, I submit that the promise-based blessing made available to the nations in Paul’s day is simply justification by faith (which, of course, is one of the key doctrines taught in Paul’s letter to the saints in Rome; see Romans 3-5). Paul clearly viewed the justification of the nations by faith as the fulfillment of the promise that “in [Abraham] all the nations” would “be blessed” (Gen. 12:3; 18:18), and this explains the connection that the nations have to the patriarchs of Israel and the promises that God made to them.

Significantly, the eventual fulfillment of this promise made to Abraham involving “all the nations” is said to have been secured by Abraham’s obedience to God (Gen. 22:18), and in accord with this fact, Paul wrote that the wild olive bough was not “bearing the root,” but rather the root was bearing it (Rom. 11:18). Moreover, this promise concerning “all the nations” being blessed was not only repeated to Abraham but was further confirmed to both Isaac (Gen. 26:4) and Jacob (Gen. 28:14).

That Paul had justification by faith in mind as the promised-based blessing made available to the nations, collectively, is further suggested by Romans 11:11. There, Paul wrote that in Israel’s “offense” is “salvation to the nations” and that Israel’s “offense” and “discomfiture” is “the world’s riches” and “the nation’s riches.” The blessing of justification by faith undoubtedly involves “salvation” (and could appropriately be described as “riches” for the nations). Justification is, in a sense, the first phase of the salvation of those who believe Paul’s evangel and become members of the body of Christ. It is what “qualifies” those who are called to an eonian allotment “in the heavens” and “among the celestials” for this allotment.

“Neither will He be sparing you!”

Paul seemed to believe that the removal of the wild olive bough from the cultivated olive tree is just as inevitable as was the removal of the natural boughs, for in vv. 20-22 he wrote: 

“By unbelief are they broken out, yet you stand in faith. Be not haughty, but fear. For if God spares not the natural boughs, neither will He be sparing you!” 

Since unbelief is said to be the cause of, or occasion for, the natural boughs being hewn out, some have mistakenly understood Paul’s warning here as being addressed to the believers to whom he wrote. However, this cannot be; Paul could never have entertained the possibility that the justification of anyone in the body of Christ might be nullified by unbelief, bringing them into a state of condemnation.

According to Paul in Romans 8:39, there is nothing that is able to separate those in the body of Christ from the love of God in Christ Jesus, our Lord - and in the immediate context of this verse, the “love of God” involves our being justified by God and our receiving a future allotment (vv. 31-32; cf. 8:15-17). Just as all who were designated beforehand by God are inevitably called, so all who are justified will be glorified (v. 30). If our justification could possibly be undone by a lapse into unbelief, then this would not be the case; since it is, our justification (and eonian salvation) is secure. But if Paul didn’t have individual believers in view in Rom. 11:20-22, what did he mean here? Who is it that “stands in faith,” and who was Paul warning to “be not haughty,” but to “fear?”

It must be kept in mind that Paul is not addressing any actual, individual gentile(s) in Romans 11:16-24; rather, he’s addressing a personified wild olive bough that represents the nations, collectively. It is this personified wild olive bough that Paul represents as declaring, “Boughs are broken out that I may be grafted in,” and it is this same personified wild olive bough that Paul warns not to be haughty, but to fear (and subsequently warns of being “hewn out” of the cultivated olive tree in v. 22). The truth that Paul is conveying through this imaginary dialogue between himself and a wild olive bough is, I believe, this: although the nations, collectively, are presently in a privileged position (having direct access to the promise-based blessing referred to in Galatians 3, apart from the mediation of Israel), this shouldn’t be understood as a permanent, unchanging state of affairs. As noted at the beginning of this section, Paul wrote as if the future removal of the wild olive bough from the cultivated olive tree was just as certain as the previous removal of some of the natural boughs.

By representing the nations, collectively, as a single wild olive bough, Paul made their inclusion in the cultivated olive tree an “all-or-nothing” state of affairs. Thus, it is simply not possible for any among the nations to be “hewn out of the olive tree” while others remain “grafted in.” Being represented by a single wild olive bough, the nations are either in the cultivated olive tree as a single unit, or they aren’t in it at all. And since the present standing of the nations depends on something that the majority of gentiles don’t even have (i.e., faith), the nations are in a pretty precarious position. It’s no wonder that Paul told the wild olive bough that it needed to “fear!”

The faith in which the wild olive bough is “standing” is the faith of those among the nations who have been called through Paul’s evangel of the uncircumcision (or who will be called through Paul’s evangel), and who are thus “of faith” and are “being blessed together with believing Abraham.” The fact that there remains some among the nations who have been designated beforehand by God to be called, justified and glorified is what is keeping the entire “wild olive bough” grafted into the tree rather than suffering God’s “severity” and being “hewn out.” Thus, the “wild olive bough” holds its present privileged position in the cultivated olive tree by virtue of the fact that some gentiles are believing - or will be believing - Paul’s evangel and being justified by faith. But this state of affairs is not permanent; its end has always been “right around the corner,” so to speak.

“…Until the complement of the nations may be entering”

In 2 Corinthians 6:2 Paul declared, “Lo! Now is a most acceptable era! Lo! Now is a day of salvation!” In this verse Paul is referring to the “era” and (figurative) “day” in which the “word of conciliation” is going forth to the nations, and when those among the nations may still be conciliated to God (and, by implication, justified) by faith in Paul’s “evangel of the uncircumcision.” It is this un-prophesied time period of unknown duration that Paul likely had in view in Romans 11:15 when he referred to “the conciliation of the world.” However, Paul himself prophesied that this “acceptable era” and “day of salvation” for the nations is, at some future time, going to end.

When the event prophesied by Paul in 1 Thess. 4:13-17 comes to pass – i.e., the removal of the body of Christ from the earth - the faith by which the wild olive bough remains grafted into the cultivated olive tree will permanently vanish from the earth, and there will no longer be any among the nations who are “of faith” (or who will be “of faith”), in the sense of believing the evangel by which a gentile can be justified and conciliated to God. And when this faith vanishes from among the gentile world, the “wild olive bough” will be “hewn out.” All direct access to the promise-based blessing of justification by faith will end for the nations, and (as was the case before Paul’s administration began), all blessings for the nations will once again have to come through Israel.

We are guaranteed by Paul that, at some point, the unbelieving “boughs which are in accord with nature” will no longer be persisting in unbelief. In Romans 11:25-27, Paul prophesied concerning calloused, non-remnant Israel as follows:

“For I am not willing for you to be ignorant of this secret, brethren, lest you may be passing for prudent among yourselves, that callousness, in part, on Israel has come, until the complement of the nations may be entering. And thus all Israel shall be saved, according as it is written, Arriving out of Zion shall be the Rescuer. He will be turning away irreverence from Jacob. And this is my covenant with them Whenever I should be eliminating their sins.

In other words, the state of affairs that Paul referred to as “callousness, in part, on Israel has come” is to continue until “the complement of the nations may be entering.” What did Paul mean by the “entering” of the “complement of the nations?” By the “complement of the nations” Paul probably had in mind the last of those among the nations who are to believe his evangel and become members of “the ecclesia” that is the “body of Christ” (1 Cor. 12:13, 27-28; Eph. 1:23). If that’s the case, then the “entering” of which Paul spoke likely refers to believing gentiles entering into the ecclesia/body of Christ. When the last of those among the nations who have been designated beforehand to become members of the body of Christ believe Paul’s evangel and are justified by faith, the time will come for the removal of the callousness that is “in part, on Israel,” and for the broken-out “natural boughs” to be grafted back into their own, cultivated olive tree.

Just as the grafting in of the wild olive bough depended on the prior removal of some of the natural boughs (Rom. 11:19), so the wild olive bough must be hewn out to “make room” for the natural boughs to be re-grafted. And when the body of Christ has been completed, it will mark the end of this present “acceptable era” and “day of salvation” for the nations, and will allow for the resumption of Israel’s “prophetic program” (when God begins to prepare his people for the return of the One who is going to be restoring the kingdom to Israel). Just as the commencement of the present “acceptable era” involving the nations being conciliated to God depended on the prior “casting away” of Israel (Rom. 11:15), so the “taking back” of Israel will require the termination of God’s present dealings with the nations.

Another strike against the “Acts 28:28” theory

Before concluding this article, I would be remiss not to mention how the content of Paul’s parable undermines the “dispensational” theory commonly referred to as the “Acts 28:28” (or simply “Acts 28”) view. According to this theory, Israel, as a nation, was “set aside” or “placed in abeyance” by God at the end of the “Acts era.” This is believed to have taken place shortly after Paul arrived in Rome as a prisoner. While speaking before a group of prominent Roman Jews in his place of house arrest, Paul (after having spoke “from morning till dusk” only to receive a mixed reaction from his audience) dismissed them by quoting from the prophet Isaiah and then making the following declaration: “Let it be known to you, then, that to the nations was dispatched this salvation of God, and they will hear.”

For proponents of the Acts 28:28 view, the time at which Paul spoke these words marks a “dispensational boundary line” for Israel and the nations that involves Israel being “set aside” by God, and the beginning of salvation being dispatched to the nations that involves a new “hope” or expectation distinct from Israel’s “prophetic program.” In another article I’ve argued that this episode in Paul’s ministry (and the words declared by Paul at this time) in no way support the theory that Acts 28:28 marks any sort of “dispensational boundary line” (whether for Israel, the nations, or both). But with regards to Paul’s olive tree parable, the problem with the Acts 28:28 theory can be stated as follows: According to the Acts 28:28 theory, Israel was not “set aside” by God until after Paul had arrived in Rome. However, according to Paul’s olive tree parable, the “natural boughs” that represent non-remnant Israel (the majority of Israelites) had already been “hewn out” of the olive tree (and the “wild olive” bough representing the nations had already been “grafted in”) before Paul even stepped foot in Rome.

Even if Paul hadn’t made it clear that some of the natural boughs had already been broken out of the olive tree, one could infer this from the fact that the “wild olive” had already been grafted in. As even the original recipients of Paul’s letter would’ve known (or at least those who had some knowledge of the horticultural technique that Paul was alluding to), a graft cannot be made in an olive tree until one or more of the “natural boughs” of the tree have been removed; this is “step one” of the grafting process. But that “some” of the natural boughs had been broken out in order to “make room” for the grafting in of the wild olive bough does not need to be inferred by the reader, for Paul has the wild olive bough make this very point in v. 19: “Boughs are broken out that I may be grafted in.” Notice that Paul does not deny this fact, but rather affirms it (“Ideally!”). Had the “natural boughs” not been “broken out,” the “wild olive” bough could not have been “grafted in.”

Since the breaking out of some of the natural boughs undoubtedly represents what Paul earlier called “their [non-remnant Israel’s] casting away” (v. 15), we can conclude the following: the state of affairs involving the nations that is being figuratively represented in Paul’s olive tree parable was made possible by the “casting away” of non-remnant Israel. And since “the blessing of Abraham” (i.e., justification by faith) began to come to the nations - and the nations began to be conciliated to God – no later than at the time of the events referred to in Acts 13:44-48 (and probably earlier than that, at the conversion of Sergious Paul in Acts 13:6-12), it follows that the “casting away” of non-remnant Israel took place no later than this time.

Thus, with regards to this state of affairs involving Israel, nothing changed after Paul arrived in Rome as a prisoner. “Callousness, in part” continued on Israel, and continues to this day. The only “part” of Israel that was not calloused and “cast away” by God when Paul wrote Romans was the chosen remnant, and, therefore, if any part of Israel was “set aside” by God after Paul arrived in Rome it would have to have been this group of believing Israelites. But there is no indication in Scripture that the events involving Paul that we find recorded in Acts 28:23-28 had any effect at all on those believing Israelites who constituted the remnant in Paul’s day. 

4 comments:

  1. Thanks Aaron!GoD blessed continually brother.Thanks for your consistency.I understand many may see thus differently but the facts are the facts and they are in!
    I also thought that you were going to add a few cents on the adherents of what seems to be Paul's evangel aka the majority of church folks and where they stand in regards to this well expounded truth.But then again you don't really cover much of this hoopla if at all in your expositions.Anyways I'm thankful for your contribution.Grace and Peace to you and your fam. brother.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you so much for your encouraging comments, Lu. By the way, my wife and I are planning on meeting some believing friends in Camden sometime this month for dinner/fellowship (they're from Columbia). I remember you saying that you live there, so I was wondering if you might be able to meet us? Just send me an email if you're interested (Areynoldsw@aol.com).

      Delete
  2. Quoted from top 1/3 "begin receiving sap (and thus life) from the tree into which it was grafted, its inherent “wild” nature would remain unchanged. It would continue to have the same nature as the wild olive tree from which it was cut (just as the “natural boughs” would remain such even after being hewn out of “their own olive tree”), and it would continue producing the same kind of leaves and fruit that it would’ve produced had it never been hewn out of its parent wild olive tree."

    This doesn't make sense to me. If there is no change to the wild branch fruit, why graft them on to the promises for Israel? How do gentile believers receiving the fat from the root provoke the natural branches to jealousy if they dont produce good fruit different than before? If wild branches produce good natural fruit, then there could be a cause for jealousy.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Unknown,

      Thanks for commenting. When I mentioned the “leaves” and “fruit” of the wild olive bough, I wasn’t trying to explain what the “fruit” or “leaves” represent (for I don’t think it represents anything, or stands in need of an explanation). My only point in mentioning the leaves and fruit was simply to emphasize that the nations don’t cease to be non-Israelites/non-covenant people by virtue of their privileged and advantageous position during this current era of Paul’s administration (which, again, is what I believe is being allegorically represented in Paul’s olive tree parable). The position of the nations, collectively (the “wild olive”), is such that they are able to receive salvation or “riches” apart from Israel (rather than through God’s covenant people), without undergoing a change in their status as those who don’t have the covenant relationship with God that Israel does. Again, the point I was trying to make is simply that the “wild olive” continues being a “wild olive” even after being “grafted in” (with its “wild” nature representing the ethnic and non-covenantal status of the nations in contrast with God’s covenant people, Israel).

      In contrast with the above, it seems to be your view that Paul’s parable was intended to tell us something about the nature of the “fruit” of the wild olive. But Paul doesn’t specifically mention the fruit. If Paul HAD specifically mentioned the fruit (and/or the leaves) of the wild olive - or made some sort of distinction between the bough and that which grows from it - I think your criticism might have some merit. However, Paul didn’t do this. And insofar as this is the case, I see no reason to think that the fruit (or leaves) growing from the wild olive has any figurative or “spiritual” meaning distinct from the bough itself. To speculate on what the fruit of the wild or natural boughs in Paul’s parable represents is, to me, like speculating on what the unmentioned soil in which the tree is growing represents. Thus, your perplexity with what I wrote seems to be based on your own assumption concerning the significance of something that is neither mentioned in, nor relevant to, Paul’s parable.

      As far as the jealousy to which Paul hoped Israel would be provoked through the glorifying of his dispensation, Paul seems to have believed that it was simply the fact that people from among the nations were being saved that would provoke Israel to jealousy (Rom. 11:11). So if – as you seem to believe – the “fruit” of the wild olive represents that which provokes unbelieving Israel to jealousy, it would have to represent the salvation of those from among the nations who believed Paul’s evangel. However, even if that were the case, the gentiles to whom Paul wrote didn’t cease to be gentiles after they were saved. Their being saved didn’t cause them to become members of God’s covenant people (as were those represented by the “natural boughs”). But again, I see no reason to speculate on what the fruit of the wild olive may or may not represent (since Paul doesn’t specifically mention it). I just don’t see it as being any way relevant to the meaning of the parable.

      I hope the above helps you better understand my position. Thanks again for your comment, and for taking the time to read my article.

      Aaron

      Delete