I ask, then, has God rejected his people? By no means! I myself am an
Israelite, a descendant of Abraham, a member of the tribe of Benjamin. 2 God
has not rejected his people whom he foreknew. 29 For the gifts and the
calling of God are irrevocable. 30 Just as you were once disobedient to God
but have now received mercy because of their disobedience, 31 so they have
now been disobedient in order that, by the mercy shown to you, they too may
now receive mercy. 32 For God has imprisoned all in disobedience so that he
may be merciful to all.
Step 1: Initial Diagnosis (External Problem) - Your Turn To Be Rejected
Two fifth grade girls sit on a playground bench during recess. Their heads
are close together as they talk and giggle. They are best friends. But two
days later one of the girls is talking and giggling with a different friend.
What happened to the first friend? Why is she sitting on a swing with a sad
smile?
Such a scene can be created by adults also. For half a year we refuse to see
a good friend who lives three doors down. We choose not to invite our
mother-in-law to the yearly family reunion. Business proposals are rejected.
Loan applications are rejected. An application for a job is rejected. It
even seems that God plays favorites—trading his favorite people, the
Israelites, for the Gentiles. It's one thing for us humans to reject one
another. But if God can switch favorites as easily as we do, how dependable
is God?
Step 2: Advanced Diagnosis (Internal Problem) - Dejected Are the Rejects
The little girl on the swing is not happy. Rejection hurts. So we grow
angry, angry at the one who rejected us—whether a friend or a bank or a place
of employment or God. When rejected, we tell our selves that we will never
deal with that [fill in the blank] again. We won't deal with God either, if
God so quickly can reject those whom God once chose. We doubt God's
dependability. How can we trust a God who would reject others and so could
reject us?
Step 3: Final Diagnosis (Eternal Problem) - Ejected from the Game of Life
We get mad at God for daring to reject God's chosen people. We think God has
made a mistake or that God has done something evil. We cannot comprehend
that the rejection is a result of our distrust of God. We have dared to
challenge the judge when there is no challenge allowed on such decisions. We
have been disobedient by our lack of trust in God and are permanently put on
the disobedient list. And all those on the disobedient list are without
God's favor, without God's life, and death is our final rejection.
Step 4: Initial Prognosis (Eternal Solution) - Nobody Had A Turn at Being Rejected. We All Were.
For we all were disobedient in that we did not love God most of all. Yet by
God's grace, Jesus was sent to us as God's way of mercy for the rejected.
Jesus came to give us his mercy and forgiveness. He chose us to be his own.
But we did not trust his offer either and he became despised and rejected
above all others. He was crucified, died, and was buried. Then God raised
Jesus from the dead! God raised up the most rejected. God raised up the one
we thought least likely to be chosen. God raised Jesus up so that God could
have mercy on all of us for the sake of Jesus. God has mercy on all those
who rejected Jesus—Gentiles and Israelites.
Step 5: Advanced Prognosis (Internal Solution) - Jesus Says It Is Our Turn Now
As God raised Jesus from God's final rejection called death, Jesus gives us
the benefit of his resurrection. He offers it as forgiveness. His offer is
ours by faith. We trust the dependability of Jesus because of his
resurrection. For by his resurrection we are given the irrevocable gift and
call of God. This call was first given to the Israelites, but by their
refusal of it all others have been given mercy. And, by the mercy of Christ
that all others have received, the Israelites are offered that very same
mercy of Christ.
Step 6: Final Prognosis (External Solution) - Injecting Christ's Mercy into the World
We are now givers of Christ's mercy to those who have been rejected. We give
Christ's mercy, not by saying that God is with us in times of rejection or
trouble, but by actually giving them Christ's mercy to them in explicit
words, "Christ is for you." "Christ has forgiven you." "Christ is God's
mercy for you." With such words God's irrevocable gift is given. God's gift
of Christ is given to everyone, not only our favorites. Congregations don't
get to choose favorites but are called to give Christ to all people.
Families don't have to exclude members, but get to give them Christ's mercy
and all the gifts of the Spirit of Christ. When others are hurt by life's
daily rejections, we can inject them with Christ's goodness so that they are
given God's irrevocable gift to overcome the rejection.