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cross of Jesus Christ, Col. 2:14, Heb. 8:13.  2. God saw fit to end the line of Jews in the world in 70 AD, Luke 19:41-44.
Talk is cheap, without proof there is no Jewish nation. With this said it isn't too much to say that there cannot be a mass salvation of the whole Jewish nation.
      Why, then, does verse 15 of our text, say, "…what will their acceptance be but life from the dead?" Doesn't it mean that the Jewish nation will be converted and then convert the whole world? Isaiah 2:2-4.  This passage is referring to the time of the first coming of Jesus with the spiritual kingdom, the church. Those entering the church will know His ways. The Jews died as a nation when Rome destroyed the Temple, Jerusalem and most Jews living there. We shouldn't count on the so-called Jews coming to life from the dead.
    He uses several "ifs" here. There are too many "ifs" to make it say what people want it to say. The doctrine of a Jewish nation being saved in the end times goes along with their doctrine of miraculous faith. Since "Faith comes from hearing and hearing from the word of God," even if one could be considered a Jews they cannot be saved as a whole nation, miraculously. They are being saved as each one believes and is obedient.
    God has not forced anyone to be saved and He is not likely to force the Jews either. Because of these ifs and because each one is saved individually, the Jews will not be saved as a nation to convert the whole world after the church is taken up in a rapture before the supposed great tribulation.
        Later on in the chapter Paul says that limbs were cut off so we were grafted in.  The branches were each cut separately not as a whole. Then we (the new Gentile Christians) were grafted in separately, singularly as we were being saved. Not as a whole group, together. Then the Jews can be grafted back in separately, singularly to the tree. Not as a whole group together. God saves people individually, not as a whole nation.
  I understand God sometimes works with a nation to bring about His desire. I Cor. 10:1-4 But then it says their bodies fell in the wilderness, v. 5. Salvation comes to those who are obedient. Acts 2:38 They were, as we are, baptized one at a time and saved one at a time, individually.
    We miss the point of this passage when we focus on the Jews and their salvation status. Paul says, here in Romans 11, he is an apostle to the Gentiles, Acts 9:15, & Acts 22:21. He is writing to a mostly Gentile audience in Rome. This letter was and is an instruction to the Gentiles on how to act in the church. Somehow, the Gentiles he is writing to seemed to have lost or maybe not have gotten proper direction or instruction. Paul gives instruction here about how the Gentile came to be in the church of Christ. The Gentiles were grafted into the tree as individuals. The Gentiles came in after most of the Jews rejected Jesus Christ. The Jews were cut out of the tree individually as each made the decision to reject Jesus Christ. We see in the Acts, as Paul preached at every city, he preached in the Synagogue of the Jews first. He wanted to give the Jews everywhere the opportunity to accept the gospel of Jesus Christ.
      While some Jews in every city did accept Jesus, most Jews did not. This left him free to evangelize among the Gentiles. But since the Jews were still very jealous of the salvation of the Gentiles Paul was persecuted everywhere he preached. He sometimes could not stay very long in a city be

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