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"Romans 11"
By Steven L Anderson
Bible Text: Romans 11
Preached on: Wednesday, Aug 22, 2007
Website: www.faithfulwordbaptist.org
Audio Sermon: www.faithfulwordbaptist.org/082207p.mp3
“I'm not saying that everyone has to
be exactly the same. Everybody's an individual. But you ought to be worth
emulating. There are people I've emulated in my life. The first few times out
soul-winning, I was emulating the people who taught me soul winning. My first
few times preaching, I was emulating preachers that I've heard. I hope that
they were worth emulating. I hope that I'm worth emulating. You ought to strive
to be worth emulating, where your family members can have you to look to as a
role model. You say, 'Well, I'm a woman.' Hey, there are people in your family
who need a female role model to look at and say, 'I'm going to be like you.'
'I'm going to be like Aunt so-and-so.' 'I'm going to be like my big sister.' 'I'm
going to be like Grandma.' 'I want to be like Mom.' I thank God that growing up
I had some people that I was looking to as a role model and saying, 'I want to
be like so-and-so.' That's the kind of person you ought to be. No matter who
you are, somebody's looking to you, I promise you.
"You say, well, 'Nobody's looking to me, I'm not a leader.' I'm telling
you: somebody's following you; somebody's looking at you. Maybe nobody's
looking at you, but you can get somebody to look at you if you get their attention,
if you provoke their emulation. I don't care whether you're a daughter; maybe
you're a child, maybe you're a son, and
maybe you're a brother, maybe you're a sister, or maybe you're an aunt or maybe
you're an uncle. Why don't you be the
person in your family that's leads the way spiritually. And I'm not talking
about telling people what to do. I'm talking about leading by example. I'm
talking about if people look up to you and say, 'There's a person who's a great
godly Christian; there's a real soul winner; there's somebody who's consistent
to church.' When you're in church you send a message to people that are
emulating you. When you don't read the Bible like you should, you're sending a
message. When they see you with a beer in your hand -- 'Oh, it's just once!' --
you send a real strong message to that person who's looking up to you. When you
have that beer in your hand, when you turn on that DVD, you're sending a
message to little kids that are there -- boys, girls, friends - emulating what
you are like. You ought to be a person people can pattern their lives after.
You need to set the pattern. I want to set the right pattern as a preacher. I
want to set the right pattern as a father. You ought to set the right pattern
as an employee. You ought to set the right pattern as a church member. Set the
right pattern for the people who are looking to you; provoke them to emulation.
Why? So that you can save some of them. Why? So they can get other people
saved.
"And by the way, who's doing the saving in this verse? Paul said 'I'm
saving someone.' A lot of people aren't comfortable with that, but I'm
perfectly comfortable with the Bible. He says that 'I might save some of them.'
Paul said, 'I become all things to all men that I might by all means save some.'
[I Cor 9:22] Again, who's the subject?. 'I might save some.' That's the apostle
Paul. How about this? Jude 22: 'And of some having compassion, making a
difference, and others save with fear, pulling them out of the fire.' You say,
who's the saviour? Jesus Christ. But if I point someone to the savior, I'm
saving them. Okay? If I throw someone a life vest, the life vest saved them,
but you know what, I'm the one who pointed them to the life vest; I saved them
as well. And so salvation is through Jesus Christ -- he is the only saviour,
don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to take away any of the glory of salvation –
but we work together with Jesus. We put on the yoke with Jesus. We work
together to get people saved, and that was Paul's goal here.
"I'm going to skip a lot of this, where he basically goes on about the
same things, just for sake of time. It's important, but I'm going to blow past
some of it. The parable that he uses here is of an olive tree. This is very
fascinating. I remember when I learned about this as a child, I was fascinated.
I couldn't believe that this is actually done, but in those days they would
graft -- And our word is 'graft'. G-R-A-F-T. But in the Bible here in the 17th
century, the word was 'graff'. G-R-A-F-F. That changed over time into the word
'graft'. This is what they would do. They would take like an apple tree, and
I'm probably using the wrong trees, but they would take like an apple tree, and
they would cut out a branch of the apple tree, and then they would take a
branch that they cut out of like an orange tree, and they would graft it into
that trunk of the apple tree. Then you would have a tree that's growing apples
on this branch and oranges on that branch. Isn't that unbelievable? Who's never
heard of that? Put up your hand. Isn’t that weird? Okay, but they actually do
that. There are certain trees that are much more productive if you take a
branch from this one and put it on the trunk of that one.
"Now it's not apples and oranges, and I'm messing up the whole thing [laughter],
but literally you can have a tree bearing more than one kind of fruit because
you have these branches from another tree graft into it. Or you can take a tree
of the same kind, take out a bad branch, and put in a good branch. Unbelievable,
it's strange. And they even have the technology -- I mean they were doing it
2000 years ago, isn't that something?
"And so that's what God is talking about, and so he uses this parable of
an olive tree. Basically there's a wild olive tree over here, and there's the
cultivated olive tree that you would have in your garden. What he is saying is that
the olive tree represented God's people; the kingdom of God. The Jews were the
natural inheritors of that kingdom. They were broken off because of unbelief,
the Bible says. Branches were broken off and removed from the olive tree. God
took the Gentile nations and graffed them in their place as his people. So now
you have an olive tree that has Jews and Gentiles graffed into the same olive
tree, which together make up ‘the people of God.’ That’s what he is talking
about here.
“I've heard a lot of people turn to this passage and try to prove that you can
lose your salvation from this passage. But when the other 1188 chapters tell
you that it's eternal and everlasting, and that you can't lose it, maybe you're
a little confused if you're trying to say that this is teaching you can lose
it. He's talking about nations here.
We're not talking about personal salvation. He's saying that just as much as
the Jews were cast away by and large (there was still a righteous remnant),
he's saying that the United States can be cast away because of unbelief. The
United States can be cast away because of wickedness. He’s also saying that
those Jews who do believe on Jesus Christ will be graffed in. They'll be added
back to that olive tree. That's all he's describing here. He's describing that
God is not loyal to races or nations of people. It's believers on Jesus Christ
that will be graffed into the olive tree. He's not saying that an individual personally
can lose their salvation. He's saying that a nation can be broken off from
being blessed by God. That's what he's talking about. The same thing is taught
in Romans 9 where he is talking about the nation of Israel versus the Gentiles.
He's not talking about personal salvation."
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