EPISODE · Jan 3, 2018 · 38 MIN
14 Is the Gospel Too Good to Be True? (Romans 9:1-13)
from Wednesday in the Word · host Krisan Marotta
Romans 9:1–13 raises a piercing question: is the gospel of Romans 1–8 simply too good to be true, and has God’s word failed when His own covenant people reject their Messiah? In this episode, we walk with Paul as he grieves over unbelieving Israel, honors their extraordinary privileges, and then begins to show that God’s promises have not collapsed—because from the beginning, He has always worked through His own gracious choice, not through human pedigree, effort, or worthiness. In this week’s episode, we explore:How Paul can move from the exultant assurance of Romans 8 to “great sorrow and unceasing anguish” over his fellow Israelites in Romans 9:1–3What Israel’s unique privileges really were—adoption, glory, covenants, Law, worship, promises, patriarchs, and even Christ’s human lineage—and why those advantages did not guarantee salvation The central question of the chapter: if many Jews have rejected the Messiah, has God’s word failed, and can we still trust His promises?Paul’s shocking claim that “not all who are descended from Israel belong to Israel,” and what that means for our ideas of spiritual heritage and entitlementWhy salvation is never based on natural advantages—family background, spiritual history, religious exposure, or national identityHow the stories of Isaac and Ishmael, Jacob and Esau illustrate that God’s saving work rests on His promise and call, not on our performance or even our future choices What “Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated” does and does not mean—and how it points to God giving undeserved mercy rather than withholding kindness from those who never wanted HimWhy original sin and our “broken choosers” make God’s electing grace astonishing good news rather than a cold abstractionPractical implications: humility instead of presumption, gratitude instead of entitlement, and confidence that our hope ultimately rests on God’s faithfulness, not our stabilityBy the end of the episode, listeners will see that Romans 9 does not undercut the good news of Romans 8; it undergirds it. You’ll be invited to face hard questions about God’s sovereignty without charging Him with injustice, to let go of spiritual privilege as a safety net, and to rest in the miracle of grace—that God freely chooses, pursues, and keeps people who could never have earned their way in. Series: Romans: Justification by Faith
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14 Is the Gospel Too Good to Be True? (Romans 9:1-13)
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