Wednesday, August 18, 2021

The Seed of Abraham (Part Two)

(For part one of this study, click here: http://thathappyexpectation.blogspot.com/2021/08/the-seed-of-abraham-part-one.html)


Among the ecclesias that Paul referred to collectively as ”all the ecclesias of the nations” in Rom. 16:4 were the ecclesias of Galatia to whom Paul wrote (Gal. 1:2). And as was the case with the other ecclesias referred to in Rom. 16:4, the majority of the saints who comprised the ecclesias of Galatia were uncircumcised converts from paganism (Gal. 4:8).[1] Keeping this fact in mind, Paul wrote the following toward the end of his letter to the saints in Galatia:


For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision is anything, but a new creation. And whoever shall observe the elements of this rule, peace be on them, and mercy, also on the Israel of God” (Gal. 6:15-16). 


The very fact that Paul denied that either circumcision or uncircumcision was anything for those “in Christ Jesus” indicates that Paul wasn’t referring to the believing remnant among God’s covenant people, Israel. For circumcision is, of course, the sign of God’s covenant with Abraham and his descendants through the line of Isaac and Jacob (Israel). In Genesis 17:9-14 we read the following:


Then Elohim spoke to Abraham: As for you, you shall keep My covenant, you and your seed after you, throughout their generations. This is My covenant that you shall keep between Me and yourselves and your seed after you: Every male among you is to be circumcised. Namely you will be circumcised in the flesh of your foreskin; and this will be the covenant sign between Me and yourselves. Throughout your generations, every male among you shall be circumcised when he is eight days old, anyone born in the household or acquired with money from any foreigner’s son who is not of your seed. He shall be circumcised, yea circumcised, the manservant born in your household or acquired with your money. Thus will My covenant be marked in your flesh as an eonian covenant. As for the uncircumcised male who is not circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin, this soul will be cut off from his people; he has annulled My covenant. 


In the ordinary course of things, circumcision was to be performed on eight-day-old male descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. There were, of course, exceptions to the more regular practice of circumcising male infants; God himself declared that newly-acquired male servants had to be circumcised as well. And any male Gentile who chose to become a member of God’s covenant people (i.e., a proselyte) would’ve had to undergo circumcision in order to do so. Moreover – and as is evident from the above passage – circumcision was (and, I believe, continues to be) no trivial or inconsequential matter to God. He himself instituted circumcision as the covenant sign between himself and Israel, and the covenant of circumcision is said to be “throughout [their] generations” (i.e., Israel’s) and “an eonian covenant.” Thus, it cannot be said that “neither circumcision nor uncircumcision is anything” for Israel. In Paul’s day, circumcision remained the sign of God’s covenant with Israel, and everything that we’re told God said to Abraham in Genesis 17:9-14 was just as true and authoritative when Paul wrote to the saints in Galatia as it was when God first spoke these words to Abraham.[2]


When Paul wrote “for in Christ Jesus,” he had in mind the status of every saint who, having been called by God through the evangel which Paul heralded among the nations (Gal. 2:2, 7), belongs to the body of Christ. But what did Paul have in mind when he referred to “the Israel of God?” Although many Christians (and even some believers in the body of Christ) want to understand “the Israel of God” as just another reference to the body of Christ, this interpretation is not tenable. In order to understand the Israel of God as another reference to the body of Christ, one must not only understand the word “Israel” in a way that Paul never used the word elsewhere in his letters, but they must ignore Paul’s use of the word “also” (which indicates that Paul is now referring to a category of people distinct from those whom he had in view previously).


According to the most natural and straight-forward meaning of the expression “Israel of God,” we can conclude that Paul was simply referring to the chosen, believing remnant among God’s covenant people, Israel. That is, it refers to those chosen and believing Israelites who, having been called by God through the “evangel of the Circumcision” (Gal. 2:7), will share in Israel’s covenant-based expectation, and will be among the “all Israel” that will be saved when Christ returns (Rom. 11:26-27). It is these who will receive an allotment in the kingdom of God on earth (i.e., the kingdom that’s going to be restored to Israel; cf. Acts 1:6).


Notice, also, how “the Israel of God” is referred to as a distinct category of people on whom Paul desired God’s mercy in connection with what he’d just said concerning the observance of “the elements of this rule” (the “rule” being that which was expressed in v. 15). Why would Paul specify “mercy” as being that which he desired would be “on” this distinct category of people (instead of simply “peace,” as he desired would be on everyone else referred to)? Answer: Because, while some within this category of believing Israelites correctly acknowledged and respected the fact that neither circumcision nor uncircumcision mattered for those belonging to the company of believers that constitutes the body of Christ, not all did. In fact, some within this company of saints were very much opposed to what Paul called the “elements of this rule.” Hence – for the sake of those who did “observe the elements of this rule” – Paul expressed his desire for God’s mercy on the entire category of Jewish believers constituting the “Israel of God.”


“Consequently you are of Abraham’s seed”


Now, keeping in mind the fact that, in his letter to the saints of Galatia, Paul was writing to ecclesias that belonged to “all the ecclesias of the nations” (and was not writing to those whom God considered members of his covenant people, Israel), let’s consider what Paul wrote in Galatians 3:5-9. In these verses we read the following:


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.”


And in verses 27-29 we read the following:


“For whoever are baptized into Christ, put on Christ, in Whom there is no Jew nor yet Greek, there is no slave nor yet free, there is no male and female, for you all are one in Christ Jesus. Now if you are Christ’s, consequently you are of Abraham’s seed, enjoyers of the allotment according to the promise.”


Was Paul revealing that the saints of Galatia to whom he wrote (and who were among the “ecclesias of the nations” referred to in Rom. 16:4) were included among the “seed” referred to in passages such as, for example, Genesis 13:14-17 and 1 Chronicles 16:12-18? Here, again, is what we read in these passages:


And Yahweh Elohim says to Abram after Lot was parted from him, “Lift your eyes, pray, and see. From the place where you now are, northward and toward the south-rim and eastward and seaward, for all the land which you are seeing, to you am I giving it, and to your seed, till the eon. And I make your seed as the soil of the land. Could a man count the soil of the land, moreover, then your seed shall be counted. Rise, walk in the land, its length and its width, for to you am I giving it, and to your seed, for the eon.”


Remember His marvelous works that He has done, His miracles and the judgments of His mouth, O seed of Israel, His servants, sons of Jacob, His chosen ones. He is Yahweh, our Elohim; His judgments are in all the earth. Remember His covenant for the eon, the word he enjoined on a thousand generations, that He contracted with Abraham, and by His oath to Isaac. He ratified it to Jacob as a statute, to Israel as a covenant eonian, saying, “To you shall I give the land of Canaan, the region of your allotment.”


In these and other related passages, the offspring of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob (i.e., Israel) who are going to be enjoying their eonian allotment in the land that God promised them are Jewish with regard to their ethnicity/lineage (i.e., they’re descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob), and are in a covenant-based relationship with God that involves the required circumcision of every male (Gen. 17:9-14). That is, the believers who constitute the offspring of Abraham to whom the land of Canaan has been promised by God belong to the twelve tribes of Israel (Gen. 49:28; Ez. 47:15; Matt. 19:28; Acts 26:7; James 1:1; Rev. 7:4-8; 21:12), and – in accord with what we read in (for example) Malachi 4:4 – can validly be considered saints who are “of the law” (Rom. 4:16).


So was Paul saying that the saints who comprised “all the ecclesias of the nations” were identical with (or belonged to) the seed of Abraham referred to in passages such as Gen. 13:14-17 or Gen. 17:7-10? No. Had Paul been doing that, he would’ve been contradicting what God himself declared and promised in these and other passages. In contrast with the saints whom Paul referred to as “Abraham’s seed” in Gal. 3:27-29, the offspring (plural) referred to in passages such as Gen. 13:14-17 and Gen. 17:7-10 consists of people who belong to the twelve-tribed nation to which the exhortation found in Mal. 4:4 was given. But how, then, can a company of saints that could be referred to elsewhere by Paul as “the nations” be considered “sons of Abraham,” and Abraham be considered our “father” (as he is said to be in Romans 4:12, 16)?


According to one view (which is a view I’ve defended elsewhere), Paul’s father/sons terminology involving Abraham and those to whom he wrote expresses the same idea that is found elsewhere in Scripture when certain people are figuratively referred to as a “son” (or “sons”) of someone or something else. For example, James and John were figuratively referred to by Christ as the “sons of thunder” (Mark 3:17), Satan is said to have been the “father” of the unbelieving Jews (John 8:38, 44), Judas is referred to as the “son of destruction” (John 17:12), and Christ’s disciples were commanded to love their enemies “so that [they] may become sons of [their] Father Who is in the heavens...” (Matt. 5:44-45).  Christ also both In these examples, a literal father-son relationship is not in view. Rather, what’s being emphasized is a certain resemblance or shared characteristic between two or more individuals (or, in the case of Mark 3:17, two individuals and a certain force of nature), with the “son(s)” in view exemplifying some particular characteristic or quality that is shared with the “father.”


Most relevant to the subject with which this study is concerned are the examples of this figure of speech being used found in John 8:37-44 and 1 Pet. 3:6. In 1 Pet. 3:6 we read that Peter – who (like James and John) wrote to believing Israelites (1 Pet. 1:1) – told the female recipients of his letter that they had become the children of Abraham’s wife, Sarah. The sense in which they “became” her children is not the same sense in which they already were her descendents with regard to their ethnicity/lineage. Rather, they “became” her children in the sense that they had become like her through their faith in God and their God-honoring subjection to their husbands.


In John 8:37-38 we read that Christ declared the following to a group of unbelieving Jews:


“I am aware that you are Abraham’s seed. But you are seeking to kill Me, for My word has no room in you. What I have seen with My Father am I speaking. You also, then, what you hear from your father are doing.”


Notice that Jesus affirmed the fact that these unbelieving Jews were, in fact, “Abraham’s seed” (for with regard to ethnicity/lineage, this was the case). However, after they tell Jesus that Abraham is their father, Jesus responds to their claim as follows:


If you are children of Abraham, did you ever do the works of Abraham? Yet now you are seeking to kill Me, a Man Who has spoken to you the truth which I hear from God. This Abraham does not do.”


Because of their wicked conduct and murderous disposition, Jesus went on to rebuke these unbelieving Jews by stating that they were the children of the Adversary rather than children of Abraham (vv. 41-44). Literally, of course, it was not the case that the Adversary was their “father” (and they his “children”); the “father/children” terminology used by Jesus was meant to emphasize a shared conduct/disposition-based resemblance.


According to this understanding, then, the believers to whom Paul wrote – in contrast with the unbelieving Jews to whom Christ spoke – can be considered “sons” of Abraham (and Abraham can be considered our “father”) because of a certain distinguishing characteristic that we exemplify and share with Abraham (and which is expressed in the following words of Romans 4:12: “…those also who are observing the elements of the faith in the footprints of our father Abraham, in uncircumcision”). But was Paul emphasizing this fact when, in Gal. 3:29, he referred to the saints to whom he wrote as being “of Abraham’s seed” (and when he referred to “all the seed” in Rom. 4:16)?


I believe that Paul had something more in mind in these verses. And I also believe that, in Gal. 3:16, Paul provides us with the key to understanding how those in the body of Christ can be considered “Abraham’s seed” without being identical with, or included among, the seed of Abraham to whom God has promised (and will be giving) the land of Canaan as an eonian allotment. In this verse we read the following:


“Now to Abraham the promises were declared, and to his Seed. He is not saying ‘And to seeds,’ as of many, but as of One: And to ‘your Seed,’ which is Christ.


Which promises from God concerning Abraham and his “Seed” did Paul have in mind here? Since Paul clearly had in mind a promise in which the term “Seed” refers to a single individual (i.e., Christ), any of the promises in which a plurality of Abraham’s descendants are being referred to (e.g., the ones in which we’re told Abraham’s seed will become numerous, and are promised the land of Canaan as an eonian allotment) can be discounted. But is there a promise in which both Abraham and his seed/offspring are referred to, and in which the seed/offspring in view can be understood as a single descendent of Abraham (rather than a multitude of descendants)? Yes, there is.


In Genesis 22:16-18 we read the following:


By Myself I swear, averring is Yahweh, that, because you have done this thing and have not kept back your son, your only one, from Me, that, blessing, yea, blessing you am I, and increasing, yea, increasing your seed am I as the stars of the heavens and as the sand which is on the sea shore. And your seed shall tenant the gateway of its enemies, and blessed, in your seed, shall be all the nations of the earth, inasmuch as you hearken to My voice.


In these verses, the term “seed” (zera) occurs three different times. In its first occurrence, the term clearly refers to a multitude of descendants. However, in its second occurrence (”And your seed shall tenant the gateway of its enemies”), the term is being used to refer to a single descendant of Abraham. This can be reasonably concluded based on the following two grammatical considerations:


1. The term “seed” is the subject of a third person masculine singular verb (“shall tenant”).


2. The direct object (“enemies”) is qualified by a pronominal suffix that is also in the third person masculine singular (and which refers back to the seed/offspring in view).


In other words, the use of the third person masculine singular verb and the third person masculine singular pronominal suffix that qualifies the word “enemies” indicates that a single descendant of Abraham (rather than a plurality of his descendants) is in view in the last clause of Gen. 22:17.


Here are some English translations that accurately reflect these grammatical facts:


American Standard Version

“…and thy seed shall possess the gate of his enemies…”


English Standard Version

“And your offspring shall possess the gate of his enemies…”


Orthodox Jewish Bible

“..and thy zera shall possess the gate of his enemies…”


Young’s Literal Translation

“…and thy seed doth possess the gate of his enemies…”


Moreover, because the immediately preceding reference to “seed” in v. 17 denotes an individual, this must also be the case in v. 18 (for there is nothing here to indicate a change in number or referent with regard to the offspring referred to in the second part of v. 17). Thus, the offspring in view in v. 18 (and in whom God said “all the nations of the earth” shall be blessed) should be understood as a reference to the same singular descendant of Abraham whom God promised “shall possess the gate of his enemies” (compare with Psalm 72:17, which connects an individual king – i.e., the Messiah – with the fulfillment of the “seed” referred to in Gen. 22:17-18). [3]


Having identified the “seed” of Abraham referred to in Genesis 22:17b and 18, let’s return to Paul’s words in Galatian 3:27-29:


“For whoever are baptized into Christ, put on Christ, in Whom there is no Jew nor yet Greek, there is no slave nor yet free, there is no male and female, for you all are one in Christ Jesus. Now if you are Christ’s, consequently you are of Abraham’s seed, enjoyers of the allotment according to the promise.”


The fact that Christ alone – and not a plurality of Jewish offspring (as referred to in Gen. 13:14-17 or 17:7-10) – is the “seed” or offspring of Abraham who is in view in Genesis 22:17b (and v. 18) explains how Paul could refer to a predominantly Gentile company of saints as “Abraham’s seed” in v. 29. For when Paul referred to being “baptized into Christ,” he had in mind the same spiritual “baptism” referred to elsewhere in his letters that is undergone by everyone who, through faith in the evangel of the Uncircumcision, becomes a member of the body of Christ. In 1 Cor. 12:12-13 and v. 27 we read the following:


For even as the body is one and has many members, yet all the members of the one body, being many, are one body, thus also is the Christ. For in one spirit also we all are baptized into one body, whether Jews or Greeks, whether slaves or free, and all are made to imbibe one spirit…


Now you are the body of Christ, and members of a part…”


Thus, in contrast with those who are among the promised offspring of Abraham referred to by God in Genesis 13:14-17 and elsewhere (and to whom God has promised the land of Canaan as an eonian allotment), our status as “Abraham’s seed” – and the related blessing of being “enjoyers of the allotment according to the promise” (i.e., the blessing referred to in Gen. 22:18, and which Paul identifies as justification by faith) – has nothing to do with our ethnicity/lineage or covenantal standing. Rather, as those who have been “baptized into Christ” (and who are thus members of his body and “one in Christ Jesus”), our status as “Abraham’s seed” comes to us directly through our inseparable, spiritual union with Christ, the singular Seed of Abraham referred to by Paul in Gal. 3:16 and prophesied in Gen. 22:17-18.


Conclusion


In contrast with the last two references to Abraham’s seed in Genesis 22:17-18, the seed of Abraham referred to in (for example) Genesis 13:14-17 and 17:7-10 – as well as the “seed of Israel” referred to in 1 Chronicles 16:12-18 – does not refer to an individual descendant of Abraham, and thus cannot be a reference to Jesus Christ, individually. But neither is it the case that the seed of Abraham/seed of Israel referred to in these verses was, in Paul’s day, constituted by the company of saints who belonged to “all the ecclesias of the nations” (Rom. 16:4). For the seed of Abraham/Israel referred to in these verses belong to the twelve-tribed people concerning whom God said, “Circumcise to yourselves every male” (Gen. 17:10), and who are distinguished from “the nations” (Gen. 26:4; 1 Chron. 16:24, 35; 17:21).


So who, in Paul’s day, constituted the seed of Abraham/seed of Israel referred to in these and other verses? Answer: the company of Jewish saints who, in the apostolic era, comprised the un-calloused, believing remnant among God’s covenant people (as referred to by Paul in Rom. 11:5-7). It was these whom Paul referred to as the seed of Abraham who are “of the law” (Rom. 4:16), and among whom were the “many tens of thousands” of believing Jews who were “all inherently zealous for the law” (Acts 21:20).


It was also those who belonged to this company of saints to whom Peter, James and John wrote their letters. According to the arrangement referred to in Gal. 2:9, Paul and his apostolic co-laborer, Barnabas, were to be “for the nations” while James, Peter and John were to be “for the Circumcision.” “The nations” refers to people who belong to a nation besides the nation of Israel. In contrast, “the Circumcision” refers to the people of Israel – i.e., the twelve-tribed descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob whose covenantal relationship with God is signified by circumcision.


In accord with this arrangement, we find that the letters of Peter, James and John were written exclusively to believers among “the Circumcision” (i.e., God’s covenant people, Israel). For example, we read that James wrote his letter “to the twelve tribes in the dispersion” (James 1:1). Similarly, Peter wrote “to the chosen expatriates of the dispersion of Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, the province of Asia, and Bithynia…” (1 Pet. 1:1). And in v. 7 of his third letter, the apostle John referred to “the nations” as a company of believers who were distinct from the saints on whose behalf he ministered. Although some have suggested that “the nations” to whom John made reference here were unbelievers, there’s no good reason to think that John – or any of the Jewish believers to whom he wrote – would’ve expected unbelieving Gentiles to provide financial assistance to any of the Jewish ecclesias. On the other hand, we know for a fact that, in accord with the agreement referred to by Paul in Gal. 2:10, the “ecclesias of the nations” to which Paul wrote had been doing just that (Rom. 15:25-31; 1 Cor. 16:1-4; 2 Cor. 8:1-9:15). 


In contrast with those who we’re told were to be “for the Circumcision,” Paul – who referred to himself as the “apostle of the nations” (Rom. 11:13) – is the only inspired writer who wrote to believers who could be referred to collectively as “the nations” (Rom. 1:13; 11:13, 25; 15:16, 18), and who belonged to what we find referred to in Rom. 16:4 as ”all the ecclesias of the nations.” It was these believers who, in Paul’s day, constituted that company of saints that Paul (and Paul alone) referred to as “the body of Christ” (1 Cor. 12:12-13, 27; Rom. 12:4-5; cf. 1 Cor. 6:15-19; 10:16-17; 12:12-27) and “the ecclesia which is [Christ’s] body” (Eph. 1:22-23; 4:4, 12-16; 5:23-24, 30; Col. 1:18, 24; 2:19; 3:15). And since every ecclesia to which Paul wrote his signed letters was among the “ecclesias of the nations” referred to in Rom. 16:4, it follows that any believers of Jewish ethnicity who belonged to these ecclesias were NOT among the Jewish saints to whom Peter, James and John wrote.  



[1] In Gal. 4:28 we find Paul referring to the saints who comprised “the ecclesias of Galatia” as “children of promise.” Many assume that, because Paul referred to these saints as “children of promise,” he believed that they belonged to the same company of saints as those whom he referred to in Rom. 9:6-8 as “children of the promise.” However, the use of these related expressions do not indicate or suggest that the two companies of saints to whom these expressions are applied share the same calling and eonian expectation. As is the case with Paul’s reference to the chosen Jewish remnant as “children of the promise” in Rom. 9:8, Paul referred to the saints who comprised the ecclesias of Galatia as “children of promise” to express the fact that their status was in accord with God’s gracious choice and promise. He wasn’t affirming (or denying) anything in particular about anyone’s calling or expectation through his use of either expression.

[2] Through the events described in Acts 10, Peter – the chief apostle of the Circumcision – learned that those among the nations who feared God and acted righteously could be saved (i.e., qualify for an allotment in the kingdom of God) apart from getting circumcised and keeping the law of Moses. That is, Peter learned that it was wrong for anyone to compel someone who wasn’t already a member of God’s covenant people (such as the uncircumcised Greek believer, Titus) to be circumcised. Circumcision was all about becoming a member of God’s covenant people, and this took place either involuntarily (as was the case for eight-day-old Hebrew babies), or voluntarily (as was the case for certain adult Gentiles who chose to become members of God’s covenant people). But to tell a believer from among the nations that they had to become a member of God’s covenant people in order to be saved was wrong.

[3] Moreover, as John Collins notes in his article on Galatians_3:16, Paul used the dative of the Greek noun “seed” (σπέρμα) when referring to Christ in Gal. 3:16. And of the several “blessings” texts from Genesis that Paul may have had in mind in his composite quotation in Galatians 3:8 (In you shall all the nations be blessed”), Genesis 22:18 (LXX) is the only one in which the dative case of this noun occurs. It’s therefore likely that, in both Gal. 3:8 and 3:16, Paul had Gen. 22:18 in mind (and that Gen. 22:18 was likely the main verse to which Paul was alluding in Gal. 3:16). 

The Seed of Abraham (Part One)

In Romans 4:11-18 we read the following:


And [Abraham] obtained the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which was in uncircumcision, for him to be the father of all those who are believing through uncircumcision, for righteousness to be reckoned to them, and the father of the Circumcision, not to those of the Circumcision only, but to those also who are observing the elements of the faith in the footprints of our father Abraham, in uncircumcision.


For not through law is the promise to Abraham, or to his Seed, for him to be enjoyer of the allotment of the world, but through faith’s righteousness. For if those of law are enjoyers of the allotment, faith has been made void and the promise has been nullified, for the law is producing indignation. Now where no law is, neither is there transgression.


Therefore it is of faith that it may accord with grace, for the promise to be confirmed to the entire seed, not to those of the law only, but to those also of the faith of Abraham, who is father of us all, according as it is written that, A father of many nations have I appointed you -- facing which, he believes it of the God Who is vivifying the dead and calling what is not as if it were -- who, being beyond expectation, believes in expectation, for him to become the father of many nations, according to that which has been declared, “Thus shall be your seed.”


Some have appealed to Paul’s affirmation in v. 13 that “the promise” in view is “not through law” in support of the position that, in the eon to come, the expectation of God’s covenant people, Israel, will not involve keeping the law that was given to them by God (and which includes the “statutes,” “ordinances” and “Sabbaths” that we find referred to in, for example, Ezekiel 20:12-13, 16, 20-21, 24, 36:27, 37:24 and 44:24). However, when Paul affirmed that the promise referred to in Rom. 4:16 was “not through law,” he simply meant that this promise – which came to Abraham before the law was given – was not dependent on the law for its fulfillment, and could not be invalidated by the law. God’s covenant with Abraham was made hundreds of year before the law was given, and thus did not contain any law-based conditions that could nullify it. As Paul stated in Gal. 3:17, “a covenant, having been ratified before by God, the law, having come four hundred and thirty years afterward, does not invalidate, so as to nullify the promise.” 


The promises Abraham received from God (including the promise that Paul had in mind in Rom. 4:16) were given without any reference to the law, and were never dependent on any legal observance for their fulfillment or confirmation. The promises depended solely on God’s own faithfulness. It is this lack of dependence on the law for the fulfillment and confirmation of the promise that Paul had in view in Rom. 4:13, and was Paul’s only point in saying that the promise is “not through law” (even the NIV Study Bible – which can’t be accused of having a “pro-dispensationalist” bias – explains the expression “not through law” as meaning, “not on the condition that the promise be merited by works of the law”). There is, therefore, no conflict between what Paul wrote in Rom. 4:13 and the place that the law will have in Israel’s covenant-based expectation during the eon to come.


But what, exactly, is “the promise” to which Paul was referring in the verses quoted above? This promise is, I believe, God’s promise to Abraham that he would be “a father of many nations, according to that which has been declared, ‘Thus shall be your seed’” (Rom. 4:17-18; cf. Gen. 17:5 and 15:5). We know that the term translated “world” here (kosmos) can refer to a multitude of people (rather than to a location), and that an “allotment” can refer to people rather than land (see, for example, Heb. 11:7; Titus 3:7; Ps. 2:8; Isa. 19:25). In accord with these facts, “the allotment of the world” referred to in Rom. 4:13 can be understood as the worldwide group of offspring that makes Abraham “the father of many nations.” That is, the “many nations” of which Abraham became “a father” (and which includes the nation of Israel) constitutes the “world” in view in Rom. 4:13. And according to Paul, the saints to whom he wrote (and who belonged to “all the ecclesias of the nations” referred to in Rom. 16:4) were among the “many nations” of whom it was promised that Abraham would become “a father.”


Now, it’s commonly believed among Christians that every believer in Paul’s day who could’ve been considered as being among “the entire seed” to whom “the promise” in view is being confirmed was a member of the company of saints that Paul referred to in his letters as “the body of Christ” (Rom. 12:4-5; 1 Cor. 6:15-19; 10:16-17; 12:12-27; Eph. 1:22-23; 4:4, 12-16; 5:23-24, 30; Col. 1:18, 24; 2:19; 3:15). However, I believe this commonly-held view is mistaken, and that what Paul wrote in v. 16 actually presupposes the existence of two separate companies of believers who could both be considered as being of the “seed” of Abraham (and who together comprised “the entire seed” referred to in v. 16). In this verse we read the following: 


“Therefore it is of faith that it may accord with grace, for the promise to be confirmed to the entire seed, not to those of the law only, but to those also of the faith of Abraham, who is father of us all...’”


Notice how Paul had two categories of Abraham’s “seed” in view to which the promise to Abraham was being confirmed: (1) “those of the law” and (2) “those also of the faith of Abraham.” Contextually, it’s clear that “those also of the faith of Abraham” are those who “are observing the elements of the faith in the footprints of our father Abraham, in uncircumcision” (v. 12). And this can be said of every member of the body of Christ. For just as Abraham’s faith while “in uncircumcision” was a faith that did not involve or require works in order for it to be “reckoned to him for righteousness” (Rom. 4:1-3, 19-22), so it is the case for all who have, through faith in the evangel of the Uncircumcision, become members of the body of Christ (Rom. 4:23-25; 5:1-2). But who, then, did Paul have in view as “those of the law?”


We know that the law to which Paul was referring here is that which God gave his covenant people, Israel (Exodus 19:4-8). And as I argued in part three of my study “God’s Covenant People” (http://thathappyexpectation.blogspot.com/2018/09/gods-covenant-people-why-most-believing_83.html), the following words from Psalm 103:17-18 were just as true and applicable to Israel during the apostolic era as they were when the Psalm was first written: “Yet the benignity of Yahweh is from eon unto eon over those fearing Him, and His righteousness continues for the sons of sons, to those keeping His covenant and to those remembering His precepts, to do them.Contrary to what most Christians believe, Israel’s covenant-based obligation to keep the precepts of the law given to them by God (as an expression of their faith in God) did not cease at any point in the first century; what changed was that, after the prophesied arrival of their Messiah, God’s covenant people had to also believe that “Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God” in order to “have life eonian in his name” (John 20:31). In accord with this fact, we also know that the divine exhortation found in Mal. 4:4 (i.e., “Remember the law of my servant Moses, the decrees and laws I gave him at Horeb for all Israel”) will remain just as applicable to, and authoritative for, Israel during the future “day of the Lord” as it was in Malachi’s day (see, for example, Rev. 14:12; cf. Matt. 5:17-20; 19:16-17; 23:1-3); in fact, the very context in which this prophetic exhortation is found concerns this future period of time.


At the same time, we know that Paul couldn’t have had unbelieving Jews in mind when, in Rom. 4:16, he referred to those of Abraham’s seed who were “of the law” (for the promise of which Paul wrote is not being confirmed to them). But nor could Paul have been referring to circumcised members of the body of Christ. For no one in the body of Christ – whether uncircumcised or circumcised – can be considered as being “of the law.” Rather, according to Paul, all who are in the body of Christ have been “put to death to the law through the body of Christ,” and are thus “exempted from the law” (Rom. 7:1-6; cf. Rom. 6:14-15; Gal. 3:23-29; 5:1-10).[1] Thus, when Paul referred to certain believers as “those of the law” he had to have been referring to Jewish believers outside of the body of Christ (such as, I believe, the “tens of thousands” of believing, law-keeping Jews referred to by James in Acts 21:20).


In accord with this understanding of what Paul wrote in Rom. 4:16, the position for which I’m going to be arguing in the remainder of this article could be summarized as follows: In Paul’s day, there were two distinct companies of saints who, for different (but ultimately related) reasons, could both be referred to as “the seed of Abraham” (and who, together, comprised “the entire seed” to whom “the promise” referred to in Rom. 4:13 is being confirmed):


1. Those who were “of the law” – i.e., the descendents of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob who constituted the chosen remnant within Israel (Romans 9:6-8; 11:5-7), and whom Paul referred to in Galatians 6:16 as “the Israel of God”; and


2. Those whom Paul referred to collectively as “the nations” (Rom. 1:13; 11:13, 25; 15:16, 18) and who constituted ”all the ecclesias of the nations” (Rom. 16:4) – i.e., the body of Christ.


The chosen seed of Israel


I’ll begin my defense of the position summarized above with a consideration of the term “seed” as it’s used in 1 Chronicles 16:12-18. In this passage we read the following:


Remember His marvelous works that He has done, His miracles and the judgments of His mouth, O seed of Israel, His servants, sons of Jacob, His chosen ones. He is Yahweh, our Elohim; His judgments are in all the earth. Remember His covenant for the eon, the word he enjoined on a thousand generations, that He contracted with Abraham, and by His oath to Isaac. He ratified it to Jacob as a statute, to Israel as a covenant eonian, saying, “To you shall I give the land of Canaan, the region of your allotment.”


The Hebrew word translated “seed” in v. 13 is zera, and – as is the case here – is often used in a figurative sense to refer to an individual’s offspring or descendant(s). And just like the English term “seed,” zera can be understood either as a collective singular (i.e., denoting multiple seeds of the same kind) or as a unitary singular (denoting a single seed). For example, in Genesis 4:25 we find the word being used as a unitary singular:


And knowing is Adam Eve, his wife, again. And pregnant is she and bearing a son. And calling is she his name Seth, saying, “For set for me has the Elohim another seed instead of Abel, for Cain kills him.” 


Here, the expression “another seed” refers to a single individual (i.e., Seth).


In contrast with how the term is used in this and other similar verses, the term is clearly being used in 1 Chron. 16:12-18 as a collective singular, and refers to a plurality of offspring/descendants (i.e., those who are subsequently referred to in v. 13 as “His servants, sons of Jacob, His chosen ones”). In addition to its use in 1 Chron. 16:12, the following passages are, I believe, additional examples in which the term “seed” is being used as a collective singular to refer to the same plurality of offspring as those referred to in 1 Chron. 16:13 as the “seed of Israel”:


Genesis 12:5-7

And taking is Abram Sarai, his wife, and Lot, his brother's son, and all their goods which they got, and every soul which they make their own in Charan, and forth are they faring to go toward the land of Canaan. And coming are they to the land of Canaan. And passing is Abram into the land as far as the place of Shechem, as far as the high oak. And the Canaanite is then dwelling in the land. And appearing is Yahweh to Abram and is saying to him, “To your seed am I giving this land.”


Genesis 13:14-17

And Yahweh Elohim says to Abram after Lot was parted from him, “Lift your eyes, pray, and see. From the place where you now are, northward and toward the south-rim and eastward and seaward, for all the land which you are seeing, to you am I giving it, and to your seed, till the eon. And I make your seed as the soil of the land. Could a man count the soil of the land, moreover, then your seed shall be counted. Rise, walk in the land, its length and its width, for to you am I giving it, and to your seed, for the eon.”


Genesis 15:13, 18

And saying is He to Abram, “Knowing, yea, knowing are you that a sojourner is your seed to become in a land not theirs, and they are to serve them. Yet evil shall they do to them and humiliate them four hundred years…”


In that day Yahweh contracted a covenant with Abram, saying, “To your seed I give this land, from the stream of Egypt as far as the great stream, the stream Euphrates…”


Genesis 17:7-10

“And I set up My covenant between Me and you, and your seed after you, for their generations, for a covenant eonian, to become your Elohim and your seed’s after you. And I give to you and to your seed after you the land of your sojournings, all the land of Canaan, for a holding eonian. And I become their Elohim.” And saying is the Elohim to Abraham, “And you shall keep My covenant, you and your seed after you for their generations. This is My covenant, which you shall keep between Me and you and your seed after you for their generations: Circumcise to yourselves every male.


Genesis 26:2-5

And appearing to him is Yahweh and saying, “You must not go down to Egypt. Tabernacle in the land of which I apprize you. Sojourn in this land, and I come to be with you and will bless you. For to you and to your seed will I give all these lands, and carry out will I the oath which I swore to Abraham, your father. And increase will I your seed as the stars of the heavens, and give will I to your seed all these lands. And blessed, in your seed, are all the nations of the earth, inasmuch as hearken did Abraham, your father, to My voice and kept My charge, My instructions, My statutes, and My laws.”


Genesis 28:13-14

And saying is He, “I am Yahweh, the Elohim of Abraham, your forefather, and the Elohim of Isaac. Do not fear. The land on which you are lying, to you will I give it, and to your seed. And become shall your seed as the soil of the land. And breach forth will you seaward and eastward and northward and toward the south-rim. And blessed, in you, are all the families of the ground, and in your seed.


Genesis 35:12

“And the land which I gave to Abraham and to Isaac, to you am I giving it. Yours it is; and to your seed after you am I giving the land.


Notice that, in each of these passages, the “seed” or offspring in view are being promised a certain geographical territory (i.e., the land of Canaan, the exact boundaries of which are specified in greater detail in Numbers 34:1-15). It’s also clear from verses such as Genesis 13:14-17 that the offspring to which God promised the land of Canaan as an eonian allotment should be understood as a reference to a plurality of people who descended from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and who belong to “the twelve tribes of Israel” (i.e., the “seed of Israel” referred to in 1 Chron. 16:13). That is, the very same seed referred to in, for example, Genesis 17:7-10 (and to whom God promised “the land of Canaan for a holding eonian”) belong to the twelve-tribed people who were commanded by God to keep the covenant of circumcision referred to in Gen. 17:9-14 (cf. Acts 7:8) throughout their generations, and to whom the law was later given (Exodus 19; Lev. 26:46; Rom. 9:4).


The enjoyment of the eonian allotment of the land by the “seed of Israel” to whom God promised it is referred to as a future reality elsewhere in the prophets. For example, in the book of Ezekiel we read the following:


Thus says the Lord God: “When I gather the house of Israel from the peoples among whom they are scattered, and manifest my holiness in them in the sight of the nations, then they shall dwell in their own land that I gave to my servant Jacob. Ezekiel 28:25


“For I will take you from among the nations, and gather you out of all the countries, and will bring you into your own land.” Ezekiel 36:24


Thus says the Lord God: “Behold, I will take the people of Israel from the nations among which they have gone, and will gather them from all around, and bring them to their own land. Ezekiel 37:21


Amos’ prophecy also concludes with a reference to the land promised to Abraham’s offspring. In Amos 9:13-15 we read the following:


“Behold, the days are coming,” declares Yahweh, “when the plowman shall overtake the reaper and the treader of grapes him who sows the seed; the mountains shall drip sweet wine, and all the hills shall flow with it. I will restore the fortunes of my people Israel, and they shall rebuild the ruined cities and inhabit them; they shall plant vineyards and drink their wine, and they shall make gardens and eat their fruit. I will plant them on their land, and they shall never again be uprooted out of the land that I have given them,” says Yahweh your God.


And in Joel 3:2, we read that God’s judgment upon the nations during the day of the Lord will be, in part, due to this promised land being divided or “apportioned”:


I will also convene all the nations and bring them down to the Vale of Jehoshaphat. And I will enter into judgment with them there concerning My people, and My allotment, Israel, whom they disperse among the nations, and My land which they apportion.


References to the Jewish seed of Abraham in Hebrews and Romans


In Hebrews 2:14-17 we read the following:


Since, then, the little children have participated in blood and flesh, He also was very nigh by partaking of the same, that, through death, He should be discarding him who has the might of death, that is, the Adversary, and should be clearing those whoever, in fear of death, were through their entire life liable to slavery. For assuredly it is not taking hold of messengers, but it is taking hold of the seed of Abraham. Whence He ought, in all things, to be made like the brethren, that He may be becoming a merciful and faithful Chief Priest in that which is toward God, to make a propitiatory shelter for the sins of the people.


We have good reason to believe that the author of the letter to the Hebrews was addressing believers who, with regard to ethnicity/lineage, were Jewish. The very fact that the letter was written to people who identified as “Hebrews” can be understood as clear evidence of this fact. We never once find the term “Hebrew” used in Scripture to refer to Gentiles (nor was it used, as far as I know, in this way in any ancient, extra-biblical writings). Instead, “Hebrews” is the original name of Judeans. Concerning this fact, ancient Jewish historian Josephus wrote: “Sala was the son of Arphaxad; and his son was Heber, from whom they originally called the Jews Hebrews” (Josephus' Antiquities of Jews Book 1, Chapter 6, Paragraph 4). It was after the Hebrews came back to Judea from Babylon that they became known as “Judeans” (or “Jews”). In accord with this fact, Paul – when referring to his own Jewish ethnicity – referred to himself as being ”of the race of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews...” (Phil. 3:5).


The ethnic identity of the recipients of the letter to the Hebrews is further confirmed from the fact that the recipients of the letter are implied to be those who were descendants of “the fathers” to whom God spoke “in the prophets” (Heb. 1:1). We further read that the recipients of this letter belonged to “the people of God” (Heb. 4:9). What we read in Hebrews 10:28-30 and 11:25 makes it clear that this is a reference to God’s covenant people, Israel (and not to believers among the nations). In these verses we read the following:


Anyone repudiating Moses’ law is dying without pity on the testimony of two or three witnesses. Of how much worse punishment, are you supposing, will he be counted worthy who tramples on the Son of God, and deems the blood of the covenant by which he is hallowed contaminating, and outrages the spirit of grace? For we are acquainted with Him Who is saying, Mine is vengeance! I will repay! the Lord is saying, and again, “The Lord will be judging His people.”


By faith Moses, becoming great, disowns the term “son of Pharaoh’s daughter,” preferring rather to be maltreated with the people of God than to have a temporary enjoyment of sin…


With regard to the first passage, the implication is that the recipients of this letter belonged to the same group of people who are in view in the verse that the author was quoting (which is Deut. 32:36). And in the second verse, “the people of God” with whom Moses preferred to be maltreated is another clear reference to Israel. Thus, when the author of the letter to the Hebrews referred to the recipients of his letter as belonging to “the people of God,” he was referring to the people to whom God was referring when he identified himself as “Yahweh, the God of the Hebrews” (Ex. 3:18; 5:1; 7:16). We can, therefore, reasonably conclude that the expression “the seed of Abraham” in Heb. 2:16 refers to those who belong to the same promised offspring of Abraham referred to in, for example, Genesis 13:14-17 and 17:7-10.


For part two, click here: http://thathappyexpectation.blogspot.com/2021/08/the-seed-of-abraham-part-two.html



[1] This doesn’t mean that there is no grace at all involved in the salvation of those believers who are “of the law.” Grace is an essential element in the salvation for God’s covenant people (for example, the very fact that not all of Israel had been “calloused” is itself an expression of God’s grace). However, when the contrast is between being “under grace” and “under law,” the expression “under grace” means grace only. Concerning the role that God’s grace plays in the salvation of those in the body of Christ and believers outside of the body of Christ, see the following two-part article: http://thathappyexpectation.blogspot.com/2021/01/a-response-to-l-ray-smiths-criticism-of.html