Psalm 67:5-7 Let the peoples praise you, O God; let all the peoples praise you. The earth has brought forth her increase; may God, our own God, give us God’s blessing. May God give us God’s blessing, and may all the ends of the earth stand in awe of God.
Introduction
God does not forget or reject God’s people. To do so would be complete refusal of God’s promises to God’s people which would cause the promises to cease to be promises. When God says, “You will be my people, and I will be your God”, it’s as good as done. “[I] will be with you; [I] will never leave you or forsake you” (Dt. 31:8), are words of promise that God utters to human beings and to the cosmos. And because the cosmos and all humanity are located deep in the divine heart and enveloped in the divine arms of love, that promise is fulfilled; you can’t out run or hide from God’s love for you. God didn’t opt to stay behind in the Garden, letting God’s people roam the earth fighting back thistle and thorn (literal and metaphorical) by themselves. God is present with God’s people which means God does not reject God’s people. In this way, God cannot be captured and put in a back pocket. God is so big and so multifaceted and so determined to be with the beloved—each and every one—God cannot be kept in a gilded cage—not spiritually, theologically, dogmatically, doctrinally, politically, ecclesiastically, denominationally, or religiously. As the late 19th century/early 20th century Jewish Philosopher, Martin Buber, wrote, “‘Woe to the [one] so possessed that [they] think [they] possess God!’”[1]
Sadly, human beings like to lay claim to God and determine whom God will reject and whom God will accept. For instance, in our Gospel passage the disciples “lay claim” to God by asking Jesus to send away the Canaanite woman who is bothering them with her incessant pleading to heal her daughter who is “tormented by a demon”.[2] She wasn’t one of them, which Jesus acknowledges. But, as the story goes, Jesus doesn’t tell her to go away. Rather, she is brought close to the glory of God in Christ because she knows God is on the side of the people of God, the beloved, of whom she is a member albeit by the adoptive power of the love of God for the beloved.
So, just as the disciples were wrong to think this Canaanite woman wasn’t to bother Jesus, so, too, are we wrong when we determine who is in and who is out in God’s name. When we do this, we are exposed as limited in our conception of divine love and deny the depth and breadth of God’s love, life and liberation in the world and for us. To make such in/out claims, we must ignore the promises of God that God will bless many nations through Abraham, that God so loved the entire cosmos that God sent Jesus the Christ, that nothing—absolutely nothing—can separate anyone from the love of God, and that God will be with you and will never leave or forsake you…and you and you and you and you and you…
Romans 11:1-2a, 29-32
Do I say then, ‘Has God not rejected [God’s] people?’ Let it not be so! For I, I am an Israelite, of the descendants of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin. “God did not reject his people whom [God] foreknew.”[3]
(Rom. 11: 1-2a)
Romans 11 marks a transition from the deep theological content of justification by God alone through faith alone in Christ alone by the power of the Holy Spirit alone to the working out of faith in the life of the believer in the world for the benefit of the neighbor. But before he does this, Paul wants to clear something up. Before his Roman audience gets the idea that God has abandoned God’s people, Israel, Paul corrects this potential assumption. God does not reject those whom God calls. (Full stop.)
The grafting in of the “gentiles” is the fulfilling of the promise given to Abraham discussed back in chapter four. This means, following logic, that the promise was fulfilled to Abraham thus to the Israelites; they are still the people of God, and into this people the gentiles are adopted and the promises of God are yes and amen for them, too, and for all others so adopted by God’s love. The promises of God are not yanked from Israel and given to the gentiles justified by faith; rather, Israel, also justified by faith, retains not only the promise, but also the fulfillment of it.[4] Also, recalling the trajectory of the work of the Spirit articulated by Luke in the book of Acts, this is also the fulfillment of the promise of Jesus to his disciples that “…The Spirit will come upon you and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria and unto the ends of the world,” (Acts 1:8). These promises of God are all one promise, fulfilled in Christ, impressed on human hearts by the power of the Holy Spirit. And they are for the Israelites and all those so adopted by God’s love.
How can Paul make this claim with such confidence? Well, while we might be used to Paul being one of the first theologians of “the Way”, the reality is that he never forsook his Jewish identity. He is an Israelite, he is one of the descendants of Abraham, he is of the tribe of Benjamin. While at times Paul has used this lineage to advocate for his elite pedigree, here he is saying one thing: if God is done with Israel, then why am I here? That I am here means that God is not done with Israel even while moving in and among the gentiles, calling them alongside the children of Israel. [5] The conception of God must be bigger than petty human tendencies of possession and objectification, of “we are right” and “they are wrong”, “we are in” and “they are out.” This line of thinking is and has been exceptionally problematic in creating a scenario of Christian exceptionalism, privilege, and supersessionist and replacement tendencies in Christian theology that have literally taken the lives of our Jewish brothers and sisters. The gentiles never replaced Israel; they were grafted in as adopted children (read: siblings) with Israel; not better, not worse, just included, loved, given life, and liberation by the hand of God.
Conclusion
There are plenty of times God has changed God’s mind as told by many stories of the first and second testaments. But I want you to hear me when I tell you: God’s mind never changes about you, because you are the beloved of God and God’s love never goes back on love’s promises to be always present and always with you. Never. Ever. God has loved you, does love you, will love you. You may waffle in your feelings and thoughts; but God always runs with passion for you. You can reject God; but God will not reject you. You can try to run from God; but God will not try to run from you. In fact, according to the overarching narrative of Romans, you can’t find absence from God even in recourse to death—not even death can separate you from the love of God (Rom 8). For God will even go there to be present with you, to summon you, to bring you deep into the folds of God’s love, life, and liberation.
And all of this is independent of what you do. As great and as bad as you are at the same time, none of it has any bearing on God’s love and desire for you. Just as your good actions do not alter God’s love for you (increasing it), so, too, do your bad actions not alter God’s love for you (diminishing it). And as it is for you, so it is for your neighbor: the grumpy one, the one who hates it when you even look at the invisible boundary separating his lawn from yours; or the neighbor caught behind bars for this or that infraction of the law; or the neighbor who finds themselves houseless, hungry, thirsty, or naked; or the neighbors who are sick or who are slowly proceeding through death’s door; or that neighbor who is lonely; or that neighbor who seems to have it together, on the other side of you, with the perfect lawn and how does it stay so green in this desert, summer heat…
There is no limit on God’s love; there is no limit on God. “‘Woe to the [one] so possessed that [they] think [they] possess God!’” Beloved, be loved and be love in word and deed in the world to the benefit of your neighbor to the glory of God.
[1] Martin Buber (“I and Thou” p. 106) qtd in Will Herberg “Introduction” in The Writings of Martin Buber (New York, NY: Meridian Book, 1956). P. 19
[2] NRSV Matthew 15:22.
[3] Translation mine, unless otherwise noted
[4] LW 25, 422. “29. For the gifts of God are irrevocable. This is a remarkable statement. For the counsel of God is not changed by either the merits or demerits of anyone. For He does not repent of the gifts and calling which He has promised…”
[5] LW 25, 421. “For if God had rejected His own people, He surely would have rejected the apostle Paul, who with all his strength had contended against God. But now, in order that God might demonstrate that He will not reject His people, He has taken up even that man who had lost hope, proving thereby how firm His predestination and election is, so that he cannot be impeded even though there is such great despair.”
WOW!!!….Praising Our Heavenly Father
and thanking you today!!!
Blessings and Love, Love ❤️ love
Libby
thank you for your words of such encouragement; they go very far!