Hello Bob,
Thank you for your helpful reply. Allow me to check my understanding again.
Please bear with me as I put what I think you to be saying into different words once again. Essentially, you understand the objection that Paul begins dealing with in verse six to be...
Objection: How can we trust that "nothing will seperate us from the love of God" if God's own chosen Israel is largely rejecting the Messiah? (The idea here is that God seemingly has failed concerning his promise of an inheritance regarding His "chosen people".)
Not quite, since I take "us" in your comment above to be a reference to an objection a Christian would make. Rather, I see it as the objection that the ever-present Jewish interlocutor is making, with some of the things Paul has already said in mind. See below.
(Furthermore, as an aside at this point, I see Paul as redefining "Israel" in such a way that it is a reference to the church/body of Christ. This is a whole other "bucket of worms," however. My view does not
depend upon it, but it does
include it.)
Paul's answer (derailment) to this objection is...
Answer: The fulfillment of God's promise of an inheritance (Gal. 5:18) is not based on being an ethnic Jew (bloodline). Rather, the fulfillment of God's promise of an inheritance is based on being in Christ.
Is this what you are saying?
Correct. Galatians 3:15-18 says that the promise could not be set aside by the law, so it was not dependent upon it in any way. Then he says that the Jews lived under to law, but it could not impart life. The Jews lived under it until the arrival of Christ.
But as I'm sure you're aware, exegesis of each book is best done on its own, before looking at other books. I just mentioned Galatians 3 because it was pretty concise.
So back to Romans....
In a previous post you commented:
Paul has great sorrow and unceasing grief over this group of people that he has in mind (verse 2). In fact, his grief is so strong that he says, "I could wish that I were accursed, seperated from Christ for the sake of my bretheren (verse 3)."
Although it doesn't need to be said that Paul is
grieved by Israel’s unbelief (Such as in Romans 10), the issue he’s actually addressing in the opening of Romans is God’s rejection of Israel, rather than their rejection of Christ. The issue for Paul is their exclusion from salvation (e.g., Romans 9:3, 8, 22ff., 30-33). Neither is Israel’s unbelief posed as a problem for God’s faithfulness.
The word "unbelief" doesn’t occur anywhere in the passage. It’s obvious that Israel doesn’t believe, but Israel is that people which identifies with the Sinaitic covenant. It claims as its identity all the things mentioned in Romans 9:4-5. Those things define “Israel.”
I would argue that Paul seeks to correct the idea that this “Israel” is the one to whom the promises were made in the first place, so their lack of faith is assumed by definition of who they are (i.e., Sinaitic Israel). This “Israel” was given promises (Roman 9:4-5) that, if believed (prior to Christ), would result in salvation at one time, but those promises were not themselves the fulfillment of the promises made to Abraham. Hence, that “Israel” is rejected and a new covenant Israel (Jew and Gentile) is formed. Part of the argument, then, is God’s response to their unbelief, but that should not be confused with an argument as to why they aren’t believing.
Paul believes that God's OT covering of sin is now done away with upon the arrival of Christ, and he explains this in chapters 3 and 9. The Jews did not fulfill their call to be obedient to God and to be a light into the world. Their sins were overlooked
until the arrival of Christ (Romans 3:25-26), but now that Christ has come and done what they could not do, Israel stands condemned. No one denies that this is the message of Romans 3,but it's also the message of Romans 9. Here is the line of thinking:
Romans 3:1-2("What advantage, then, is there in being a Jew, or what value is there in circumcision? Much in every way...")
Corresponds to:
Romans 9:1-5(The advantages of being "the people of Israel" are listed, but not salvation.)
Romans 3:3("Will their lack of faith nullify God's faithfulness?")
Corresponds to:
Romans 9:6("It is not as though God's word had failed.")
Romans 3:5("That God is unjust in bringing his wrath on us?")
Corresponds to:
Romans 9:14("What then shall we say? Is God unjust?")
Romans 3:7(" ...why am I still condemned as a sinner?")
Corresponds to:
Romans 9:19("Then why does God still find fault?")
Romans 3:9,25("What shall we conclude then? Are we any better? Not at all! We have already made the charge that Jews and Gentiles alike are all under sin.")
Corresponds to:
Romans 9:30-11:32 (The disobedience Israel leads to an opportunity for the disobedient Gentiles, which in turn opens yet another opportunity for hardened Israel.)
Israel is an object of wrath, as are all who identify with it's covenant identity. It has not submited to God righteousness (Romans 10:1-5). Physical descent from Abraham counts for nothing as far as right-standing with God is concerned. It is only in Christ, the fulfillment of God's promise to Abraham, that they will receive mercy. Through Christ a new people will come.
With the arrival of Christ, Paul argues, the situation for the Jews has changed. Now, they find that they are sinners, and God's covenant faithfulness was fulfilled through Christ, not Israel. Therefore, God's true covenant righteousness is even more glorious set against the backdrop of Israel's covenant failure. This is why, after all, the Jews are expected to turn to God, in Christ, for salvation.