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The paper explores the concept of the restoration of Israel as perceived in New Testament scholarship. It examines how Second Temple Jews viewed their historical condition as one of exile, reinforcing their expectation for restoration, as articulated in various scholarly works. The analysis includes the juxtaposition of the Gentile mission alongside themes of destruction, suggesting a strategic deployment of outreach to establish communities in anticipation of the diaspora. The conclusion posits that the restoration is not yet realized, emphasizing the role of the Gentile mission in this larger narrative.
This paper examines Psalm 110 and Isaiah 41. Isaiah takes old theological concepts and merges them together into a prophecy about the transformation of Israel. Where the Davidic King was once enthroned by Yahweh in Psalm 110, now Israel is enthroned by Yahweh in Isaiah 41.
Rejection: God's Refugees in Biblical and Contemporary Perspective, 2015
What does the pro`ile of this Israel look like? Who belongs and on what terms? When, where, and by what means does the nation's restoration occur? By addressing these questions I hope to underscore how reading allusion to Deut 30.1-10 in the four later narratives illumines various possible and indeed competing literary models for re`iguring Israel's identity in the wake of foreign conquest and under the shadow of an exile literarily imagined as unresolved and ongoing. To undertake this study I develop an intertextual and reader-oriented approach to biblical allusion. This approach allows for exploring the interpretive possibilities reading allusion offers irrespective of authorial intention. Rather than take up questions such as, "is there suf`icient evidence to indicate that an author intended to signal an allusion to Deut 30.1-10" or, "how did the author intend for his/her original readers to construe the text's meaning in light of the allusion," my study considers questions such as, "what elements in the text, whether intentional or accidental, allow for reading an allusion to Deut 30.1-10" and, "how does the allusion, once activated, affect the perception of meaning in the alluding text." My interests, then, are less with demonstrating that an allusion is actually and intentionally present in the text or that an original audience would have interpreted an allusion in a particular way and more with claim to continuity with pre-exilic Israel and concur with Tamara Cohn Eskenazi, "From Exile and Restoration to Exile and Reconstruction," in Exile and Restoration Revisited: Essays on the
This paper claims that the historic church's position on Jewish ethnicity and Israel's land promise has misunderstood the implied teaching of the New Testament. When read as an ancient Jewish document, the New Testament affirms both the presence in the ecclesia of a Jewish ethnic pattern of life structured by the Torah and the abiding hope for territorial restoration. The paper calls the church to reclaim these elements for the renewal of our theological imagination of the church of Jesus the Messiah.
Criswell Theological Review, 2018
This article organizes the most helpful texts for understanding the idea of ongoing exile during the Second Temple period, and offers five ways in which the themes of exile and restoration matter for Biblical Theology.
2008
This paper analyses the identity and conditions of the Israelite community who did not go into the Babylonian exile. Their identity, religious background, and socioeconomic conditions are investigated. Despite the fact that they were the majority, they were left poor through the redistribution plan of the Babylonians. They continued to worship at the site of the temple, and the people who returned after the exile therefore had no right to exclude them from rebuilding the temple.
Human communities periodize history in diverse ways, reflecting essential aspects of their beliefs or experiences. For traditional Jewish thinking, the Hebrew Bible has formed the core of a powerful belief system. The Hebrew Bible focuses on the relationship between God and humanity and especially the relationship between God and a special portion of humanity, the people of Israel, whom he chose as his human partners. In the biblical view, the relationship between God and Israel was grounded in the covenantal demands that God placed upon Israel. Thus the divine-human relationship could be readily tracked through the historic fate of Israel. To the extent that Israel fulfilled the demands of the covenant, it would be rewarded; to the extent that it neglected the demands of the covenant, it would be punished. A key component in this scheme of blessing and punishment was the particular land that God had assigned to Israel as its homeland. Divine blessing and divine punishment could be regularly assessed by Israel's fortunes in general, but especially by Israel's habitation in the Promised Land or its distancing therefrom. Traditional Jewish periodization of history very much reflects this biblical belief system, especially its insistence on the fate of Israel as a reflection of divine-human relations and on the Land of Israel as
Many Jews in diasporic communities of the Second Temple period maintained an allegiance to their homeland in Judea and found ways to resist cultural homogenization wherever they lived. This is not to say their cultural expression was identical to Jews in the homeland. Recently a group of scholars, including Noah Hacham, Daniel Schwartz, and Michael Tuval, has underscored the extent to which Jewish expression in the Greco-Roman diaspora differed from that in Judea, primarily because of the physical distance from the temple in Jerusalem-the spiritual center of the people. These scholars argue that Jews in places such as Egypt, Asia Minor, and Babylonia forged their own brand of Judaism quite disassociated from the temple institution and better prepared for survival after the destruction of the temple in 70 CE.
The subject of the restoration of Israel has been a focus of NT scholarship since the early nineties. This can be seen in writings such as those by N. T. Wright, 1 M. Fuller, 2 M. M. B. Turner, 3 or in volumes of collected essays such as those by M. J. Scott. 4 The accent of such scholarship is that the Jews of the Second Temple still expected restoration because the restoration under Ezra and Nehemiah was incomplete. So, for example, the return of Jews from Babylonian Exile was partial, the temple that was built was a shadow of the Solomonic temple, no Davidic monarchy was re-established, and there was no fulfilment of prophecies relating to the Israel's position of lordship over the nations. Some Jewish writings of the inter-testamental period therefore looked for fulfilment of these things.
As a matter of historical analysis, it is asserted that if the Jews looked for restoration, then they must have considered themselves to be "in exile" in the land. Thus, Wright remarks, "The need for this restoration is seen in the common second-temple perception of its own period of history. Most Jews of this period, it seems, would have answered the question 'where are we?' in language which, reduced to its simplest form, meant: we are still in exile". 5 Whether this is the view of NT writers remains to be examined.
Fuller's analysis of Second Temple literature offers four ideas of restoration: i) the physical return of the remaining Diaspora; ii) the gathering of a righteous group from within the land of Israel; iii) the gathering of the lost ten tribes; and iv) an allegorization of Israel's re-gathering. 6 Of course, Fuller accepts that the data offers a more complex picture, but these four ideas represent an opening analysis. In this article we want to discuss the idea of a an expectation of a physical return of the Diaspora.
There are several distinctions to mark in this area which centre on words that occur in the scholarly literature.
Effect -the restoration of Israel was being put into effect with the calling out of a remnant from Israel who would constitute the restored people after the wicked had been removed from the land.
Demonstration -what the restoration of Israel would be like was being enacted in the parables and exorcisms of Jesus, and later in the miracles of the apostles.
These ideas are not inconsistent or mutually exclusive. The two difficult notions are that the restoration of Israel was inaugurated and was being put into effect in the first century. These ideas are difficult because, manifestly, Israel was not restored, and the dissolution of the state was prophesied by John the Baptist and Jesus from the beginning of their ministry. This point is not as decisive as it might seem because it is argued that if the church is a restored Israel -the remnant -then the parting of the ways between Judaism and Christianity could be presented as a completion of the restoration of Israel in a new body -a New Israel.
A lot is issues are wrapped up in this topic, for example, 1) Did the early church expect an imminent return of Jesus and the subsequent establishment of the kingdom of God; in this case, was the restoration of Israel inaugurated with the ministry of John the Baptist and expected to come to completion in the soon return of Jesus?
2) Did the early church consider itself to have been transferred to the kingdom and believe that it was in some sense present and realized in the church; in this case, did the church think of itself as the restoration of Israel?
3) Why has there been a period of two thousand years since the birth of the church? Is the church today (Christendom) the continuing remnant of Israel? Why did the return of Jesus not take place during the apostles' generation? 4) Is there a future purpose for Israel? What is the relationship of the church today to Israel? How do both figure in the purpose of God?
These are difficult questions, but more so for those who do not follow a continuous-historic view of Revelation. Without such a reading, the last two thousand years are largely a blank page in the purpose of God. Having said this, even a continuous reading leaves the last two thousand years a blank page in respect of the vicissitudes of the Jewish Diaspora. Why have there been no Jewish prophets since the time of the early church?
The answers to the above questions are partly hidden because there have been no prophets since the early church. However, there is precedent and pattern in God's dealings with Israel and there is a prophetic program laid out in the OT. It is possible therefore to answer these questions from the standpoint of someone living in the first century -such a person would have no conception that there would be at least another 2000 years before the return of Christ.
The idea that the kingdom of God is "near" and that is already in some sense a "present reality" among those who were "of Christ" is not without precedent. The idea that the kingdom has "begun" or been "inaugurated" -that it has started to be put into effect -this idea is represented in the eighth century prophets. It is no accident that NT writers appeal to Isaiah more than any other prophet. However, in Isaiah's day the kingdom did not come to full realization. It began with the deliverance of Jerusalem; it was accompanied by a bestowal of the Spirit; many of the oracles in Isaiah 35, 40-66 paint the prospect of an imminent establishment of the kingdom under Hezekiah. However, it did not come about because of Hezekiah's sin in the matter of the visit of the Babylonian envoys. 7
The precedent should have tutored a first century Christian to expect postponement in the purpose of God even with the pleading with Israel that was being undertaken by the church. This pleading is illustrated throughout the book of Acts, which is where the prophetically recorded history ends.
What else might a first century Christian have expected? Jesus had prophesied the destruction of Jerusalem and John the Baptist had prophesied a coming wrath. Such prophecies preclude an easy path to the restoration of Israel and the fulfilment of the national aspirations of the Prophets. Isaiah had also prophesied a preaching of the good news to the Gentiles. This was being fulfilled by the apostles and evangelists. How would a first century Christian have reconciled preaching to the Gentiles with an expectation that Jerusalem and the temple were to be destroyed? The issue can be put in Isaianic terms:
The preaching to the nations is captured by the motif "light to the Gentiles" (Isa 42:6,49:6,61:9,66:19,KJV), but this outreach is part of a complex situation in which the idolatry of the nations is opposed (Isa 43:9,45:20); nations are regarded as of little consequence (Isa 40:15, 17); nations will be subdued (Isa 41:2, 60:12, 64:1); nations will witness the military prowess of God (Isa 52:10); nations will carry Israel home (Isa 49:22,66:20); nations will run to Israel and her light (Isa 55:5, 60:3, 5, 11, 66:18); judgment will be taken to the nations (Isa 42:1, 61:11, 62:2); Israel will expand into the territory of the nations (Isa 54:3); and Israel will receive tribute from the nations (Isa 60:16, 61:6, 66:12). This is prophetic context for the preaching of good news to the nations, and this poses the question: how did the first century Christian understand the fulfilment of Isaiah's "light to the Gentiles" (Luke 2:32, Acts 1347, 26:23) in the absence of a lack of fulfilment of other nationalistic prophecies.
The answer to this question lies in the Olivet prophecy insofar as that prophecy places the restoration of Israel after the destruction of Jerusalem and exile (Luke 21:24, 28). There is therefore in the NT scheme a central place for the destruction of Jerusalem and an exile, whereas in Isaiah, the preaching to the Gentiles is of a piece with the restoration of Judah.
In the latter half of Isaiah (40-66) the Gentile mission is part and parcel of the restoration of Judah and Jerusalem is central to that restoration on several levels. In the NT, the mission to the Gentiles has been brought forward prior to a destruction of Jerusalem and with only the prospect of the restoration of Israel (Acts 3:19-21). This raises the question, why? Why was a restoration theme (the Gentile mission) juxtaposed and implemented alongside a theme of destruction and exile?
With Jesus' prophecies of exile ("led away captive into all nations", Luke 21:24), a first century Christian would naturally think of the Babylonian Exile as the historical model: what had happened then (and why) was now going to be repeated in his day. But here there is a coincidence that explains the Gentile mission. Prior to the nation being led away captive into all nations, the good news was preached in "all nations" -ecclesias were located witnessing to the existing Diaspora and ready to witness to the enlarged Diaspora after AD70: God placed the remnant of Israel in the places where Israel were going to be scattered. This is the pattern of apostolic preaching in Acts -where the apostle Paul goes in the Diaspora, he preaches to the local synagogue -the ecclesia is set up in relation to the local synagogue even if it has to be separated as a result of Jewish opposition. This pattern would tutor the first century Christian in his preaching after AD70 -to preach the good news about the restoration of Israel when his Lord returns.
This introductory essay is programmatic. It does not explain all of the reasons for the Gentile mission; it does not explore the explanation that the gospel was taken to the Gentiles in order to provoke the Jews to repentance; we have not emphasized the grace of God in widening the gospel to the Gentiles; and we have not shown how the redemption of God wrought in the death of Christ is the basis upon which deliverance is preached to all men. Our objective has been to introduce the topic of the restoration of Israel and argue that restoration is not inaugurated in the first century -rather the preaching to the Gentiles is brought forward to place the "righteous" where Israel were going to be exiled.
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