I read from God's Word, the book
of Romans. I'll be preaching, emphasizing
Romans 10, 1 through 4, but in order to give us some context
for what Paul is continuing to say as it relates to the Jews
and the Gentiles and the coming of the kingdom of Christ and
the spread of the gospel and who God has designed that gospel
to convert, even until the end of the age. I'll read verses
1 through 5 of Romans chapter 9, and then Romans chapter 10,
verses 1 through 7. I'll read chapter 9, verses 1
through 5 first, and then I'll move to chapter 10, 1 through
4. Listen as I read from God's word. I tell the truth in Christ. I am not lying. My conscience
also bearing me witness in the Holy Spirit. that I have great
sorrow and continual grief in my heart. For I could wish that
I myself were recursed from Christ for my brethren, my countrymen,
according to the flesh, who are Israelites, to whom pertain the
adoption, the glory, the covenants, the giving of the law, the service
of God, and the promises of whom are the fathers, and from whom,
according to the flesh, Christ came, who is over all, the eternally
blessed God, amen. And then Romans chapter 10, excuse
me, beginning in verse one. Brethren, my heart's desire and
prayer to God for Israel is that they may be saved. For I bear
them witness that they have a zeal for God, but not according to
the knowledge for they being ignorant of God's righteousness.
and seeking to establish their own righteousness have not submitted
to the righteousness of God. For Christ is the end of the
law for righteousness to everyone who believes. Thus far, the reading
of God's word. You may be seated. Let me pray
now for the blessing of the preaching of God's holy and inspired word. Lord, we come to you this morning
as a people who need to be taught how to live in this world that
you have made. And that begins first with the
renewal of our mind by your spirit, that we might think your thoughts
after you, that which is revealed, that which you have made known.
For we know that the secret things belong to you, and there is much
in scripture that is to us a challenge and a mystery. And yet you have
called the kings of the earth, You have called your people to
search out your word and to understand the mysteries that you have prepared
for us to, by your Spirit, determine and apply and know. Lord, that
we would not only be faithful in hearing but doing your word,
that you would change us by the power of your spirit that you
have sent out unto the world. We pray these things in your
name, amen. The question that I endeavor
to answer at least in some fashion, though this is a lengthy conversation
and is even now a hotly contested topic among many in conservative
right-leaning circles, is what has happened to the Jews. What
are we to think of Israel? That for those who have rejected
the Messiah, and for this reason, clearly, in the word, were accursed
for it, the 2,000 years that has followed, what are we to
think of this people that are, in every respect, our forefathers
in the faith? What are we to think not only
of their spiritual state as a people, but how are we to read Paul and
to emulate the heart of this righteous apostle? Paul himself,
a Pharisee of Pharisees. Paul himself, in God's own determination,
to save him from a state not only of self-righteousness, but
of aggression against the church of the Lord Jesus Christ. How
are we to think of all of the apostles? How are we to think
of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, of Moses and of David and of
the prophets? How are we to take Romans 10
and rightly believe and apply what Paul will begin to say is
an ongoing plan that God has for the nation of Israel? And it begins here this morning
under these two headings. The first, Paul's heart for Israel. Paul's heart for Israel, and
then second, an off-repeated refrain today, one that I wish
to cover in some fashion, the Israelite, or as it is often
called, the Jewish problem. This is code for something else.
The first part, Paul's heart for Israel, and then second,
the Israelite, or Jewish problem. Let's look at this first point
this morning. Paul's heart for Israel. Now the reason I went
back to chapter nine, verses one through three, is because
it is here in chapter nine, one through five, really one through
three, and in Romans chapter 10, verses one through four,
that Paul expresses how he feels about the denial of his countrymen
that Jesus was and is the Messiah. It gave him great sorrow, verse
two of chapter nine, and continual or perpetual grief, such that
from this statement or feeling of sorrow, he expresses in verse
three, I could wish that I myself were accursed from Christ for
my brethren. In this, Paul was not only Jewish,
but a true Jew. A true Jew is not one who is
simply a Jew outwardly or by ethnicity or genetic makeup,
but a true Jew, according to the Epistle of Romans, is one
who received Christ as the end or the consummation, the full
and final revelation of the system of God's righteousness revealed
in the Scriptures. And what Paul knew of Israel,
was that they missed it. They got so close to the finish
line and yet they stumbled over the rock and stumbling stone
that was and is the Son of God come in the flesh, Jesus the
Messiah, Jesus of Nazareth. This is the one whom we rightly
confess because God has made it known to us by his grace Jesus
is Lord. And so concerning this, John
Murray, in his wonderful commentary on the book of Romans, writes
this, the term he, that is Paul, uses now do not have the intensity
used earlier, but it is the same heartfelt, deep-seated solicitude
for his kinsmen according to the flesh. The address with which
he begins, brethren, that is in chapter 10, is one charged
with emotion and affection and draws our attention to a, he
says it again, solicitude, a warm affection expressed in the words
that follow. For those who are outside of
the fellowship, which the term brethren implies. Israel had become those who were
cut off. Not all of them, of course, as
we know from our Bibles. But in the main, as a group,
as a nation, when Christ came to them, John and his apostle
says, though Christ came to those, the very ones sent by the Father,
they did not receive him. Christ came to his own, and his
own did not receive him. And so they were cut off. They were cut off because they
killed the Messiah instead of believing in the Messiah. Instead
of embracing him as their Lord and Savior, they sought, through
the system of righteousness that God had revealed to them, to
achieve righteousness by works, of which Paul says in Romans
3 and 4, is not possible. For no man can be justified by
words, but only by faith. Now what is faith? Faith is a
resting and receiving alone the righteousness of Christ. We must rest and we must receive
the righteousness of Christ. And that righteousness is imputed. It is given. It is not infused,
as the Roman Catholic Church teaches. It is always an alien
righteousness as it relates to our being credited as righteous
in the sight of God as judge. The Jew did not believe this
in the main. But as a people, almost to the
man, they denied this system of righteousness. And it is for
this reason, in Romans chapter nine, that they stumbled. We call this blasphemy of the
Holy Spirit. It is to deny the external calling
of the Spirit to bring about a condition of repentance and
faith in Christ's righteousness. And in light of this, as a people,
Paul looks at his brethren and it breaks his heart because of
all that they had received. And yet when the Messiah came
to them and all of these things leading up to the Messiah, that
at the very end of the race, as it were, they did not cross
the finish line. They stumbled. They deny Jesus as Lord, and
so he feels grief. Elsewhere, Paul, though, in light
of this coming Messiah and the revelation of Christ, expresses
gratitude. Paul talks about his own conversion,
a Pharisee of Pharisees, according to the law. No one kept the law. No one had greater zeal than
Paul. He was a zealot. Paul uses that word zeal. They
had zeal for God. but not in a way that would lead
to righteousness, because they sought salvation by works. But not Paul, but he was until
Christ came and transformed him and converted him and made him
his disciple. And as we move through Romans
10 and continuing, In the Romans 11, we read that the rejection
of Christ by the Jews is not entire, it is not total. And
so even then, as Paul moves from Romans 10 to 11, he will express
hope. And what is that hope built upon?
That God does not remain angry forever. That God does bring
salvation even to those who in their obstinance deny him the
seat and the authority of Redeemer and Lord. But Paul knew what
they deserved. Paul understood what they would
get because of their rejection. And so, as we continue through
Romans chapter 10, it is not just a, brethren, my heart's
desire and prayer to God for Israel is that they may be saved. But because of their rebellion,
as he said earlier in chapter nine, they deserved judgment. Paul understood why they would
receive judgment. Paul expresses it very clearly.
Had Christ not been denied, then those who would have embraced
him would have been redeemed. Now we must not, nor cannot say
that the rejection of the Messiah when he was in their midst was
like any other sin. In fact, the rejection of the
Messiah, when Christ walked among his people, was one that spoke
to not just a rejection of the system of righteousness historically,
but was an even more high-handed act of betrayal and blasphemy
against God. In fact, in Romans chapter nine,
as I read earlier, in verses four and five, that those brethren
according to the flesh, those countrymen who are Israelites,
to whom pertain the adoption, the glory, the covenants, the
giving of the law, the service of God, which references the
priesthood, and the promises of whom are the fathers, that
is, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, those men in particular whom
God made covenant with according to the flesh, Christ came. He came to them. And all of these
gifts God poured out upon the nation, a distinct group of people. Now, this is not to say that
in the Old Testament that there were not Gentiles who were brought
in, those like Rahab, those like the slaves who left with Israel
from the land of Egypt, who were not just the descendants of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, and the 12 tribes. Ruth, as we know, as
I began preaching last week, was a Moabitess. The Moabites
were the tribe that they acted in aggression against the people
of Israel as they called on Balaam to prophesy and to curse Israel. When that did not work, because
a donkey stopped him, an angel of the Lord sending a message,
even as Balaam continued to try to prophesy against Israel, every
time he opened his mouth, he spoke blessing. And so the Midianites
and the Moabites send in all of these women into the land
of Israel so that they may compromise through idolatry and adultery
the men of Israel. That's the story where Phinehas
goes in and he runs a man and a woman in the act of adultery
through the stomach with a spear. And he gets a promotion because
of his jealousy for the glory of God. And so God says to Israel,
because of the Moabites, you are to never fellowship with
them. But then later this woman, Ruth, comes to Israel from Moab. And she is the one who is the
mother of Obed, who is the mother of Jesse, I'm sorry, the mother
of Obed, who is the father of Jesse, who is the father of David. The Gentiles were always part
of the plan. In fact, one of the great sins
that Christ confronts in his earthly ministry is that the
Jews had shut off the court of the Gentiles to the Gentiles
through their corrupt business practices, which is where he's
overturning the tables. Because the vision of the temple
is that it would be the house of prayer for all nations. And
so Israel was involved in deep idolatry that not only caused
them to be cold to the Messiah when he would come, but also
the promises of God that the Messiah would open up and fling
wide the doors of heaven for the Gentiles. Israel's rebellion
was not only high-handed, it was utter, it was total, it was
complete. But it was not because they did
not have zeal. In fact, let's keep looking. But in Israel,
pursuing the law of righteousness has not attained to the law of
righteousness. That's chapter nine. And then
Paul picks up on that theme again in chapter 10. For I bear them
witness that they have a zeal for God, but not according to
knowledge, for they being ignorant of God's righteousness and seeking
to establish their own righteousness have not submitted to the righteousness
of God. Years ago, believe it or not,
I played basketball for two years in high school. Now the only
way that happens is when you go to a very small Christian
school. And I remember the first time I started a game. I was
a point guard, obviously. It wasn't a power forward or
a center. It would never happen. It was the Hobbit team. And that
would be the only way I get an inbound pass and I'm so caught
up in the moment that I run the opposite way to the opposing
goal. Fortunately, the referee blew
the whistle and I got called for a backcourt violation before
I put the ball in the other team's goal. We call that an on goal
in other sports. I was so enthused that I got
to finally start a game. And the coach, I look over and
just went, Such is the zeal of Israel as
it relates to the accomplishing of the true righteousness that
God revealed. God in his word says, here is
how you can be saved. You must come to the altar of
sacrifice and have your sins wiped away by the blood of another.
And only then, only then does your obedience Can it please God? And so Israel
got the inbound pass, they got all of that revelation, and they
went in the opposite direction. They went the wrong way completely,
and not just sort of strolling, but they hit that, they were
running to that goal like there was no defender there. Just with
gusto. and rebellion. Do you wonder
why, when Jonah preached grace to Nineveh, they can be forgiven
if they would but repent? And then Jonah is angered because
God shows mercy to a repentant sinner. Do you know why he was
angered? Because his system of righteousness was not one that
was built upon grace shown to sinners. He despised Nineveh. And it is that heart of Jonah
that is expressed in even harder way by the time Jesus comes and
shows up in the flesh. The Jews treated their system
of righteousness like an exclusive club that could only be entered
through money and blood and human transaction. It was a system of righteousness
that spat, literally spat, in the face of God's grace shown
through His Son, Jesus Christ. Now, lest you think that the
Jews are alone in this, do not forget this creed. If it were
not for the grace of God, there go I. In fact, think of the countless
nations to which missionaries who proclaim the grace of God
go, and in response to the gospel of grace, the demons who have
stronghold of those people in their idolatry and unbelief respond
with the weeping and gnashing of teeth. against the true light
of God's word. There have been places where
the missionaries of the gospel go and there are people, there
are witch doctors, there are those who are lost in deep darkness
and they hiss and they growl and they scream and they pronounce
curses against those who carry the gospel. Why? Because the
darkness, wherever it is found, despises the light. And the Jews were captured. They were captured. They were
lost in deep darkness. And despite their zeal, despite
their sincerity, they were running the opposite way. Their zeal was in completely
the wrong direction. For when Christ came, they were
zealous not in the receiving of him, but what? In the denying of him, in the
charging of Christ with blasphemy, and in the crucifying of Christ
by incorporating, by using Rome in their capital punishment.
in order to mock him, such that they placed a sign above his
head that said, the King of the Jews. Actually, it was Rome that
did that. The irony is what? They were
right. They were right. Israel was guilty of wretched,
high-handed, cosmic treason. And so the question for us is
this, what are we to think of them now? Who are they? Because these questions
are often presented to us, and there is, I would argue, in the
midst of those who rightly have embraced the Western tradition
in God's grace of the gospel, moving from Israel, from Jerusalem
to Judea to Samaria and to the utter ends of the earth. What
are we to think of these people who rightly can be charged with
the crucifixion of the Lord Jesus Christ, whom the apostles charged
with that? Well, in order to answer this
question, we must approach this answer with care and a humble
posture as we endeavor to avoid undue or imbalanced hatred or
resentment that keeps us from the kind of activity that God
requires of the Church and as individual Christians as we interact
with those who self-identify as Jews. Now historically speaking,
we must say that the Jews are unique as a people who received
so much divine favor, grace, revelation, and enduring patience
and long-suffering by God. And we ought to lay at their
feet their own rebellion, as Paul does in Romans chapter 9.
They denied the Messiah, and they are guilty for that. In
fact, it is for this treason and blasphemy that John writes
in the book of Revelation and elsewhere in the apocalyptic
sections of scripture like Zephaniah and Zechariah and Daniel and
elsewhere, that God rode out in judgment to destroy the temple
and the city through that wicked nation of Rome. The temple has
therefore been destroyed. That act of judgment was God
saying, not only to the Christian church, you don't have to come
to Jerusalem anymore, and the place of holiness is no longer
the land of Canaan, it is all the earth. And so we don't have
to go to the city. There is no holy land. in the way that it was perceived
and understood in the Old Testament, where there was a holy land.
This is why Elimelech sinned when he left Bethlehem to go
to Moab, because you could not be blessed outside of the land
of God. But now that the land has been
destroyed, as it were. God has, in a redemptive historical
way, made it very clear, you don't have to go here. It doesn't
matter if the temple is rebuilt. There will be no re-offering
of sacrifices when the millennial reign begins, as the dispensational
premillennials say. And so, who then are the Jews? Well, the history between the
Christian church and those who have historically denied Christ
is an important one to understand. And so for us who are endeavoring
to engage with those who are highly suspicious and dogmatic
against the Jewish people, one of the questions we need to answer
is, who are the Jews? And I would say we need to answer
it from this perspective. We need to talk about those who
God considers to be Jews. Who does God consider to be those
who fit the description that Paul gives in Romans 9 and Romans
10. Those who were of the visible
people of God, who consider themselves as those who waited for the Messiah,
yet deny the Christ. Well, it's just that. It is those
who continue to take a portion of God's word seriously, namely
the Old Testament, and who have added to it the wicked Talmud,
which is a wretched document that is wholly unbiblical and
is pernicious above all things. It is no less righteous than
the Quran, or the Book of Mormon, or any other text that is not
divinely inspired of God. We must say, if God did not write
it, it is what? It is anathema. Even if it pertains
to and contains truth, just because there are elements where there
are truth, it still leads us astray from the Messiah. And
so for those who continue, to take part in taking some of God's
word, but denying the power and what Paul calls the end of the
system, which is the full and final revelation of God's system
of righteousness of the scripture, those are ones we should consider
to be Jewish in faith. And they persist in taking part
in rebellion against God's clear revelation. And for this they are guilty
of great sin. For they have received so much
goodness, so much light. Is it not David who says, it
is not in sacrifices that you delight, O Lord, but what, a
broken and contrite heart. That system of justification
and righteousness is wholly contrary to a system of works that Paul
condemns in Romans 3 and 4. And so if there is a person who
has received all of these gifts, namely the Jews, and they've
received all of this, and yet they deny the substance, the
full and final word of God's revelation, and they do so in
a way that corrupts scripture, that shows their hearts to be
not only corrupt but stubborn, they are enemies of God, and
yes, they are enemies of the church. But what are we to do with our
enemies? What are we to do with our enemies? We must name them,
and then we must seek their what? Their salvation. We must stand
opposed to what they teach. They should not be given place
to teach publicly, because what happens when those lies are brought
forth in public? Then people will be led astray,
and so what do we endeavor to do? We endeavor to silence untruth,
and we endeavor instead to speak louder than the lies and bring
them to salvation. And not just the Jews. But is it not part of the mission
of the church to pull the plug on all the calls to holy prayer
that Islamists practice? It would be a wretched thing
indeed for a nation that is built upon the principles of scripture,
where the church bells ring out every Sunday morning and evening
when the saints of God are to gather to worship, and then you
hear that strange, hollow, demonic chanting calling people to face
Mecca and to pray seven times daily. Is that something you
want to hear? What is that if it is not an
affront to the Lordship of Christ? And yet, what have we done largely
in the West? We have said, as long as they
don't bother me and keep me from making money and stand in the
way of educating our children, we'll just let it happen. And
what's happened? We've given Satan a toe in the door, and
he's pushing it open. We have practiced, in essence,
publicly speaking, a secular faith, and we need to repent
of that. Now, as it relates to their sin,
the Jews in particular, what lies at the heart of it is this.
They did not submit to the righteousness of God by faith, but rather they
sought and still seek through their own righteousness of works
to please a holy God. while maintaining to embrace
the scriptural system of faithfulness. They are hypocrites. In fact,
in Acts chapter 13, when Paul and Barnabas, during his first
missionary journey, we read, beginning in verse 44, on the
next Sabbath, almost the whole city came together to hear the
word of God. But when the Jews saw the multitude, they were
filled with envy. and contradicting and blaspheming,
they opposed the things spoken by Paul. Then Paul and Barnabas
grew bold and said, it was necessary that the word of God should be
spoken to you, that is the Jews, first. But since you reject it
and judge yourselves unworthy of everlasting life, behold,
we now turn to the Gentiles. For so the Lord has commanded
us, I have set you as a light to the Gentiles, that you may
be for salvation to the ends of the earth. Now when the Gentiles
heard this, they were glad and glorified the word of the Lord,
and as many as had been appointed to eternal life believed. Let
us not forget that behind the scenes that controls all of this
is the appointment of God to both Jew and Gentile unto salvation. It is God who appoints. But the
will of God and the will of men are not contrary to one another,
rather they run in parallel, as Paul has said in Romans chapter
nine. And so the only way for one to be restored from one's
bad religion, of contradicting the gospel of Christ and blaspheming,
as we see in verse 45, is to do what? Is to believe. It is to embrace Jesus as the
Messiah. But as a nation, as a people,
as a visible church, one might say, the Jews have denied Christ,
that Jesus is the Christ. And for this reason, they are
like no other people that have ever lived, except us. In this way, they were raised
on God's word. And despite being reared and
nurtured in the truth of God's word, they denied the heart of
the system. It would be like this. You come
to church every day, and you hear an even clearer word that
has now gone out to the nations, that Jesus is the Christ. And
week after week, Sunday after Sunday, when you sit with your
parents and they tell you about the love of God that is in Christ
Jesus, you say, no. That is not something I want
to believe. And this is why the scriptures
say that for those who have tasted of the heavenly gift and yet
deny the grace of Christ, it would be better had you never
been born. And so what is to be said of
those who are living hollow and empty lives as though it would
be better had they never been born? What kind of life is that? It is a pitiful life. It is a
sorry life indeed. Pertaining to the persistence
of the Jew as it relates to looking at the scripture then and not
only misunderstanding and so denying Jesus, their denial of
Christ is by and large 2,000 years in the making. In fact,
when John Calvin was writing his commentary on the book of
Daniel, And as he was taking Daniel chapter 2, which speaks
of the kingdom of God that will come and crush the kingdoms of
this earth, how would you rightly understand and apply that? Which
kingdom has come and is crushing the kingdoms of earth? You should
rightly say, the kingdoms of Christ. Is this not what Isaiah
says? We sing it during the Handel's
Messiah, or we hear someone sing it. The kingdoms of this earth
have become the kingdoms of our God. This is about the Messiah. And so when Daniel is writing
in his commentary on this particular passage, this is what he says.
But here, he not only betrays his ignorance, he is writing
of a rabbi who lived at the time named Rabbi Barnabel. In fact,
he wrote prior to Calvin. Barnabel lived from 1437 to 1508.
Calvin is writing about Rabbi Barnabel's interpretation of
this Daniel chapter 2 text. But here he, Rabbi Barnabel,
not only betrays his ignorance, but his utter stupidity, since
God so blinded the whole people that they were like restive dogs.
I have had much conversation with many Jews. I have never
seen either a drop of piety or a grain of truth or ingeniousness. Nay, I have never found common
sense in any Jew. But this fellow, who seems so
sharp and ingenious, displays his own impudence to his great
disgrace." Now, we love Calvin when he talks about piety and
the doctrine of justification and saying all of that. And we
go, Calvin is the greatest. And then we read Calvin and go,
whoa. And he's labeled here what? What
would be the typical cultural label? All right, I guess Calvin's
also now an anti-Semite, right? But what is Calvin asserting
when he says, I have never seen either a drop of piety or a grain
of truth or ingeniousness? No common sense. Because when
you open your Bible and you read it from Genesis to Revelation,
And you say that the kingdom that crushes these other kingdoms
is the Turks? What are you doing? What I would
call hermeneutical somersaults to avoid the actual meaning of
the text. Who does that? People who, in denying Jesus
the title of Messiah, do whatever they have to do, do all manner
of exegetical sort of, you know, like Neo in The Matrix, where
he's sort of falling backwards, and all of this truth would hit
him if he weren't bending over backwards to believe or endorse
something else. It's stupidity. And yet, for the past several
decades, Many have associated the virtue of Christianity with
a hyphen. In fact, we give to pride of
place the virtue of those who, apart from Christ, can have no
virtue. You know the phrase? Judeo-Christian. How do you do
that? How would you then say Moabite-Judeo? How can you say that? We don't say Islamic Christian. Why? Why don't we do that? Because there has been for many
years this idea that because we share something of the Old
Testament, we are family. Well, we are family in the sense
that Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob are our forefathers. But not
by blood. In fact, the only reason that
Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and we share any lineage whatsoever
is because 2,000 years ago Christ came and he died upon the cross
because he has united in his body and blood the family that
is of faith from the old and the family of faith that is from
the New Testament or New Covenant. That is our lineage by faith. And so my hope in this is not
to incite those who see behind every ill in the world a Jew. Because there are many who now,
having been radicalized by actually exploring the religion of the
Jews and the religion of the Christians, and see that at the
center of it is Christ, and unless you confess Christ, you are a
false religion. What then are we to do? Well, what is Paul endeavoring
to do? Paul was, for a season, until they absolutely denied
him any audience, went to the Jews. And he expressed sentiment
that he wished they would be saved. Here is, I think, where
we find ourselves oftentimes in a dangerous place in the church. We are too controlled by fear,
and we ourselves become covetous of others, We are too controlled
by this narrative, and as we move out from underneath one
narrative, we swing to an equally problematic on the other side
of the spectrum narrative. For what are we to do with our
enemies? We must know where they are our enemies, we must know
how they are our enemies, and we must know how it is our enemies
can become our friends. And we must not let them continue
to bear the title of those things that keep them from putting Christ
first. Christ must reign. Earlier I said that the only
people who are as near to the Jews in their unbelief and hypocrisy
would be those who are in the church. Why? Because we hear
the truth all the time. Unless we respond with faith
in Jesus Christ, we are what? The world's greatest hypocrites. And so we ought then, when we
see these who are struggling with faith, do what? Not adopt
their virtue. Reject it. Reject a system that
denies Christ, but instead, go after them. Proclaim a better
way. In fact, it is Paul that says,
it is through envy that they will come to know Christ. Build
something better. Be faithful in your piety. Be persistent. Build a kingdom
that they look at and go, surely Jesus was the Christ. Show forth evil in our midst.
Name it for what it is, but then seek to be, A, yourself transformed,
and B, seek for others to be transformed as well. So do not
be taken in. Put up your shields, know your
Bible, know your confession, and then get to work. Because
we're called not only to minister to those who once betrayed Jesus
as the Christ and who continue to do so by their confession,
but all who do it. We begin with our homes, we begin
in our counties and we move out through all the earth. Let's
pray. Lord, even now this morning, may we be