Follow the context. That is not what Paul is doing. Even the Bible translaters new that, and gave the section the heading of Justification in the Old Testament by faith. The Abrahamic covenant has NOTHING to do with salvation. The promises God made about blessing all the nations of the earth, and that by Christ all the nations of the world would be blessed, do deal with salvation, but they were not covenants, but promises.No, and that is what Paul is explicitly denying in Chapter 4:1-6. Paul is interpreting the full meaning of the Abrahamic covenant in the OT.
So please explain how that works in relation to Daniel 2. According to God, He doesn't even set up the kingdom until the 10 concurrent kings. That is the leg portion of the statue, which speaks to the Roman Empire which did not end until the Turks took Constantinople in the 15th century I believe. The 10 kings are not chronological, they are kings concurrently. So where in the first/second century were there 10 nations with 10 kings? (No more, no less.) And then where was one king who showed up and wiped out three? Not an additional king, but one of the original 10.It was something that could not be fully revealed (interpreted) until the one who ultimately fulfilled it, Christ, had come, completed perfect righteousness, died, was resurrected. ascended back to the Father. He has completed all those things. Had done so in Paul's day. Jesus is already King of kings and Lord of lords. He is already on Zion (Ps 2). He is already the Son of David sitting as King.
That is not a covenant.Those who interpret the Abrahamic covenant and its "all nations will be blessed" as only belonging to the Jews are still hanging out in the old covenant just as the Jews of Jesus' day were. Does God have a covenant with the reconstituted (1948) nation of Israel? Or with the Jews?
"15 Then the angel of the Lord called to Abraham a second time from heaven, 16 and said, “By Myself I have sworn, declares the Lord, because you have done this thing and have not withheld your son, your only son, 17 indeed I will greatly bless you, and I will greatly multiply your [e]seed as the stars of the heavens and as the sand which is on the seashore; and your [f]seed shall possess the gate of [g]their enemies. 18 In your [h]seed all the nations of the earth shall be blessed, because you have obeyed My voice.”"
This is not a covenant. This is a promise sworn by God, by His own name. The seed here is Jesus Christ, and this is saying that salvation will be to the whole world, not simply Israel. Again, this is NOT a covenant.
You aren't even talking about the Abrahamic covenant, but the promises God made outside of the covenant. Even Paul is clear when he said that all this came before Abraham was circumcised. Paul is saying that it is outside the covenant, which was only for the Jews. As such, since the promise came before Abraham was circumcised, and the promise came by Abraham's faith, the uncircumcised can be saved by faith.That is reading your interpretation into what I said and doing so using language that undermines your own argument by having to resort to analogies that are ridiculous and unfounded. No covenant was violated and I have not said anything that remotely suggests that unless one is misinterpreting the Abrahamic covenant. The result of a backward hermeneutic that makes the OT interpret the NT.
The Mosaic covenant is separate. The Mosaic covenant was made with Israel through Moses, hence Mosaic. The Mosaic covenant is based in the Law, the Abrahamic covenant, again, has its fulfillment in faith, not the law. They are contradictory in nature. The Mosaic covenant was made with a nation, the nation of Israel. The Abrahamic covenant was made with Abraham, and covered his descendants, who were identified by physical circumcision. In other words, it is an ETHNIC covenant. It is later (thanks to the wonders of progressive revelation) that we learn that God does not consider the physical descendants of Abraham by the Law to be saved, but only those physical descendants that are ALSO (just emphasis) spiritual descendants by faith. That is, the elect remnant of Israel, who are the true Israel of God within the secular nation of Israel.All the caps does not change the fact that I never said or implied that the Mosaic covenant superseded the Abrahamic. In fact I remember at one point saying it was within the Abrahamic C not separate from it. Distinct, but not separate. You do know, I hope, that it is against the rules to misrepresent a persons view and you have done that several times. Ask questions if you have them but don't simply assume and then misstate.
Why do you keep bringing in things that don't mean anything. I understand your envy of Israel and the Jews, considering it grows out of the deep antisemitic hatred of the old Catholic Church. (An extension, I am not saying you are antisemitic, just envious.) This is why you need to remember Romans 11. Paul already covered this about the Gentiles. Ooh, they were cut out so I could be grafted in. Be aware. We are solely in the new covenant (not Israel), by the kindness of God. He is ready to cut out any who do not continue in said kindness. The Jews were cut out by the severity of God in response to their unbelief/rejection. Unlike the Gentiles, God will reattach those Jews who turn to unbelief. If a Gentile gets cut out, there is no remediation. Hence Paul's warning.It has happened. That support would be in those portions of my posts that you ignore. Jesus is the constant focus, the central figure, the protagonist of the overarching Covenant of Redemption from Gen 3:14-15 on of the OT as well as the NT. A geo/political nation and an ethnicity never replace that and is never the focus. Israel is about Jesus iow, not an ethnic people and a political/religious power. Israel one might say is simply the womb of the incarnate Jesus. It serves a purpose---many purposes---all of which needed to be worked out in history as God gathers his people, giving them to Christ---through regeneration and faith. When they have all been gathered into the flock. then Jesus returns and all is made new. It is all about him and as Scripture says FOR him.
What is the stumbling block? Timothy took his Jewish heritage so that the fact that the people knew his father was Greek would not become a stumbling block. His MOTHER was Jewish, and for him to remain as a Gentile/Greek would become a stumbling block. Paul had Timothy take his Jewish heritage. He did not have Titus do so, because Titus was not Jewish. The Jewish identity/heritage comes from the mother, not the father. It's in the Law.That had nothing to do with the Sinai covenant or the Abrahamic covenant.
Acts 16:3
“Paul wanted Timothy to accompany him, and he took him and circumcised him on account of the Jews who lived in that area, for they all knew that his father was a Greek.”
If you put that into the context where it belongs it was not about salvation or the covenant but about effective ministry and removing stumbling blocks.
As for why there are so many paragraphs, is that so many ideas are presented originally, and I deal with all of them. However, that makes my response like the original, with many ideas presented. I'll consider how to break it up in the future.
