Romans 11:11-21 Pastor Nathan P. Kassulke
“You Are Grafted In”
Lent 5 Sunday, April 7, 2019
If you travel to the Holy Land today, you can visit an olive grove on the hill just to the east of the city of Jerusalem. And in that olive grove, Gethsemane, you will almost certainly be encouraged to consider some trees, olive trees, that may be among the oldest trees in the world. These trees clearly date back into the Middle Ages, but your tour guide will probably tell you that they could be even older than that. He or she will probably tell you that these trees could have been standing in that garden all the way back to the time of Christ. When he went to that garden to pray, he may have walked right past the very trees that you would walk past. There are a lot of “maybes” and “possibilities” involved in that assessment, but it is true that these trees are very old. It is also a possibility that can’t really be determined whether these twisted and gnarled trees could really be so old that they would have been alive for Jesus to walk among them. This is true because these olive trees have a hardy root system that allows them at times to be cut back, nearly to the ground. And even when that happens, they can grow back large branches, perhaps even more productive as far as growing olives, as the trees were before this extreme pruning. So the specific branches that you could see on your visit would almost certainly not have welcomed Jesus to the garden, but the roots to which they are attached could have held other branches that did. The section of Romans chapter 11 that we are giving special attention to in our sermon brings to mind the heartiness of the olive tree root. It compares the people of God to an olive tree, a tree from which some branches had been removed and other branches have been grafted in. This section is a part of a larger portion of the book that focuses on what was going on among the Jewish people, the people descended from God’s chosen Old Testament nation of Israel. Many of them had fallen away from the faith. When Jesus came as the long-promised Messiah, the Savior of the world, many did not recognize him as such. They turned away from him. They rejected him. As a result, they missed out on what God had been teaching his people for centuries. They missed out on the One to whom all of their unique religious ceremonies and customs pointed. Meanwhile, Gentiles, non-Jewish people who had long been on the outside of God’s people and not an integral part of this unique chosen nation, were becoming believers. They were becoming members of God’s family. They were connecting with Jesus as their Savior, hearing about and believing what he had done for them. Paul, by the Holy Spirit’s leading, speaks about these matters in comparison to an olive tree. God’s people make up that tree, connected to God himself and Jesus as Savior. Many of the Jews who were born into that tree, who were a part of the family of God by birthright, had been cut off through their rejection and unbelief. For the Gentiles who had come to faith, though, it was like they had been grafted into that tree. It wasn’t theirs by birth. They had been branches growing somewhere else, but they were attached to this unique and special tree to receive nourishment from its roots. Paul’s words of warning and encouragement to Gentile Christians speak volumes to us today. They remind us also of the unique position we share as members of the Church of God. They tell us that we have been grafted in and therefore encourage us to remember God’s grace and to remain in the faith. As I mentioned, Paul writes at length about the relationship between Jews and Gentiles, and between Christians and non-Christians. As the fullness of God’s plan was being revealed in Jesus Christ, and as that message was being shared throughout the world by his followers, there came to be a division. The Jewish people who truly held to what God said and taught came to see Jesus as the promised Savior. They witnessed how he fulfilled the promises God had made, and how he truly understood and taught what God had been driving home for his people all along. Others, though, did not recognize these things. They rejected the idea that Jesus was their Savior. They insisted on their own interpretations of what God had said. Many of them were looking for a very different Messiah.