The Unbroken Olive Tree: Why Israel’s Redemption Is Not “Awaiting” a Future Event

 Introduction: A Common Misconception

For many Christians, the redemption of national Israel is seen as a future event—something still pending, held in abeyance until the Second Coming or the end of the age. The assumption is that God has temporarily set aside His covenant people, allowing the church (mostly Gentile) to take center stage until a dramatic, last-minute national repentance of Israel.

But what if this view misses the unbroken continuity of God’s plan? What if the redemption of Israel is not something that “awaits” in the future as if it has not yet begun, but is an ongoing reality rooted in the covenant with Abraham, dramatically advanced in the first century, continuing today, and culminating in the future?

Scripture, history, and the present reality in Israel tell a different story: the good olive tree has never been uprooted. It has been secured from the time of Abraham, the father of us all, and all who are grafted into it—Jew and Gentile alike—share in the same holy root.

1. The Good Olive Tree: Rooted in Abraham, Never Replaced

Paul’s famous metaphor in Romans 11:16–24 is the key:

“If the root is holy, so are the branches… Do not be arrogant toward the branches. But if you are, remember it is not you who support the root, but the root that supports you.”

The root is the covenant promises given to Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and David—an everlasting covenant (Genesis 17:7–8). The natural branches are the Jewish people. Some were broken off because of unbelief, but the tree itself has never been discarded or replaced. Gentiles are wild olive branches grafted in to share the nourishing sap of the root. The tree remains Israel’s tree.

This means the church does not replace Israel; it is grafted into Israel’s covenant line. The redemption of Israel is not a future restart—it is the ongoing fulfillment of God’s unbreakable word to the patriarchs.

2. Historical Witness: The Early Church Fathers Saw the Church as the Continuation of Israel

The view that the church is grafted into Israel’s olive tree is not a modern invention. It was the dominant understanding in the earliest centuries of Christianity:

Justin Martyr (c. 150 AD), in his Dialogue with Trypho, describes the church as the “true spiritual Israel,” not as a replacement, but as the fulfillment of the promises to Abraham. He writes: “We, who have been led to God through this crucified Christ, are the true spiritual Israel, and the descendants of Judah, and of Jacob, and of Isaac, and of Abraham” (Dialogue 11). He sees believing Gentiles as fully incorporated into Israel’s covenant line.

Irenaeus (c. 180 AD), in Against Heresies, affirms that the church inherits the promises made to Abraham: “The promises were made to Abraham and his seed, that is, to those who are joined to Christ by faith” (Against Heresies 4.8.1). He explicitly rejects any notion that God has abandoned Israel; rather, the church participates in Israel’s covenant blessings.

These early voices show that the idea of the church as the continuation of Abraham’s seed was not a later development—it was the apostolic and post-apostolic consensus.

3. The First-Century Fulfillment: A Massive Remnant Believed

The New Testament records that the Messiah’s coming brought an immediate, substantial ingathering of Israel:

• Luke 1:68–69, 76–78: Zechariah prophesies that God has “visited and redeemed His people” (Israel), raising up a horn of salvation in the house of David, to give knowledge of salvation through forgiveness of sins.

• Matthew 2:5–6: The Messiah is born in Bethlehem to “rule my people Israel.”

• Luke 2:14: The angels proclaim peace to those on whom God’s favor rests—beginning with Israel.

• Acts 2:41: 3,000 Jews believe on the day of Pentecost.

• Acts 4:4: The number of believers grows to 5,000.

• Acts 6:7: “A great many of the priests became obedient to the faith.”

• Acts 21:20: James reports “many thousands” (Greek: myriades—tens of thousands) of Jewish believers in Jerusalem, all zealous for the law.

James addresses “the twelve tribes in the Dispersion” (James 1:1), and Paul identifies himself as “an Israelite, a descendant of Abraham, a member of the tribe of Benjamin” (Romans 11:1), part of the “remnant chosen by grace” (Romans 11:5). The early church was overwhelmingly Jewish, and a significant portion of Israel—across tribes, priests, and leaders—recognized Yeshua as their Messiah.

4. The Continuity Today: Messianic Jews in the Land of Israel

The story did not end in the first century. In modern Israel, a vibrant Messianic Jewish movement has emerged:

• Estimates place the number of Messianic believers in Israel at around 30,000 (as of 2025), with 280–300 congregations.

• This represents a roughly sixfold increase since the late 1990s.

• Major ministries include ONE FOR ISRAEL, Caspari Center, King of Kings, Tents of Mercy, and many Hebrew-speaking congregations.

• These believers are often Israeli-born, serve in the IDF, and maintain Jewish identity while confessing Yeshua as Messiah.

This is not a new phenomenon—it is the continuation of the same remnant Paul described in Romans 11:5. The good olive tree is still alive and growing in the land promised to Abraham.

5. The Future Culmination: Preserved Remnant and National Turning

Revelation 7:4–8 describes 12,000 sealed servants from each of the twelve tribes of Israel during the great tribulation. This is not the beginning of Israel’s redemption—it is the preservation of a remnant from every tribe so that the full identity of Israel remains intact through the final judgments.

This aligns with Paul’s promise in Romans 11:25–26:

“A partial hardening has come upon Israel, until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in. And in this way all Israel will be saved.”

The 144,000 are part of the believing remnant, protected by God, and they point to the final national repentance and restoration foretold in Zechariah 12:10–13:1. The piercing of the One they mourn for was fulfilled at the cross (as John 19:37 applies Zechariah 12:10), initiating a spirit of grace and supplication that drew a massive first-century remnant to faith. Yet in the intense pressures of the great tribulation, this small, preserved remnant may “look again” upon Him whom they pierced, with deepened mourning and recognition, amplifying the national turning already underway. But they do not represent a “new start”—they are the continuation of the same olive tree.

This “partial hardening” explains the continued unbelief among many Jews today—it is temporary and purposeful, serving God’s wider plan to bring in the fullness of the Gentiles (Romans 11:25). Yet it has never nullified the root or uprooted the olive tree. The existence of a faithful remnant—first-century, modern Messianic, and future sealed—demonstrates that God’s redeeming work in Israel has continued unbroken, even amid the hardening.

Paul’s statement that “all Israel will be saved” (Romans 11:26) is not a sudden, future-only event that resets history. It is the culmination of the ongoing work God has been doing since Abraham: a final national repentance and ingathering of the remnant (Zechariah 12:10–13:1), in which the believing remnant from every tribe plays a central role.

Rather than seeing Israel’s redemption as a future “Plan B,” Scripture presents it as a continuous, faithful unfolding of God’s covenant promises—culminating when the Deliverer, who has already come from Zion, “fully turns ungodliness away from Jacob” (Romans 11:26–27). This is the same redemptive work that began with the cross, exploded through the massive first-century ingathering of Jewish believers, continues today in the Messianic remnant, and will reach its complete national expression when the partial hardening is fully lifted.

This perspective reshapes how we read the end-times prophecies:

• The 144,000 sealed from every tribe of Israel (Revelation 7:4–8) are not the beginning of Israel’s redemption, as if God were starting over with a new group. They are a protected remnant of the already-believing people of God, preserved through the great tribulation so that the full identity of Israel (every tribe) remains intact—like the final capstone that crowns the structure, ensuring no gap remains in God’s redeemed people.

• Paul’s statement that “all Israel will be saved” (Romans 11:26) is not a sudden, future-only event that resets history—nor does it mean every individual Jew (for “not all who are descended from Israel belong to Israel,” Romans 9:6,8). Rather, “all Israel” refers to the complete tribal nation preserved intact. It is the culmination of the ongoing work God has been doing since Abraham: a final national repentance and ingathering of the remnant (Zechariah 12:10–13:1), in which the believing remnant from every tribe—the 144,000 sealed servants—plays a central role.

6. A Middle Path: Neither Replacement Theology nor Strict Dispensationalism

This biblical picture occupies a balanced middle ground between two common extremes:

Replacement theology (supersessionism) teaches that the church has permanently replaced Israel, and the promises to Abraham are now fulfilled only in the church. This view struggles with Romans 11’s clear teaching that the natural branches can be grafted back in and that “all Israel will be saved.”

Strict dispensationalism often views the church as a parenthesis—an interlude in God’s plan—with Israel’s promises and national redemption held in abeyance until a future, separate event. This can unintentionally suggest that God ultimately has two distinct peoples with two separate destinies, rather than one olive tree in which Jew and Gentile share the same holy root.

Yet the New Testament also guards against equating the covenant promises with a merely political or earthly national kingdom. The old covenant administration of the kingdom—centered on temple, priesthood, and theocratic nation—was judged and transformed in Christ (Matthew 21:43; Hebrews 8–10). The earthly shadows have given way to spiritual realities: the true temple built of living stones (1 Peter 2:4–5), the kingdom bearing fruit through all who believe, and the dividing wall of hostility abolished so that Jew and Gentile are now one new man (Ephesians 2:14–15), with no distinction in access to salvation (Romans 10:12).

The view presented here honors both covenants:

• God’s promises to Israel remain intact and are being progressively fulfilled.

• The church (Jew and Gentile) is fully included in those promises by faith, grafted into the same root.

There is one people of God, one olive tree, one flock, one Shepherd.

7. One Flock, One Shepherd

Jesus Himself confirms this unity in John 10:16:

“I have other sheep that are not of this fold. I must bring them also, and they will listen to my voice. So there will be one flock, one shepherd.”

The “other sheep” (Gentiles) are brought into the same fold—not a new one. There is one flock, one Shepherd, and one olive tree. Gentiles are not a parenthesis or a replacement; they are grafted into the covenant people of God, sharing in the promises given to Abraham.

Conclusion: The Redemption of Israel Is Already Underway

The evidence is overwhelming:

• The olive tree is rooted in Abraham and has never been uprooted.

• A massive remnant of Israel believed in the first century.

• That same remnant continues today in the land of Israel.

• God will preserve a final remnant from every tribe through the tribulation.

Israel’s redemption is not something that “awaits” as if God has forgotten His promises. It began with Abraham, exploded in the first century, continues today, and will reach its climax when “all Israel will be saved.” The church is not a replacement or a detour—it is the fulfillment of God’s plan to bless the nations through Abraham’s seed (Genesis 12:3; Galatians 3:8).

The good olive tree stands unbroken. And we—Jew and Gentile—are privileged to be part of it.

 

The Seeds of Dry Bones: Israel’s Scattering to God’s Army

Introduction: The Vision Unveiled

What if the dry bones rattling in Ezekiel’s vision weren’t a dusty relic of prophecy, but God’s breathtaking blueprint for the salvation of the world? Picture a field—barren, lifeless—where a farmer scatters seeds not in despair, but with unshakable purpose. Those seeds are Israel, chosen to fall into the earth, to die, and to rise through Christ as an army of light spanning the globe. This isn’t conjecture; it’s a truth woven through scripture and history, hidden in plain sight, shaking awake anyone who dares to see.

Through four steps—scattered, reassembled, revived, and raised as an army—God unfolds His plan: Israel’s exile sows the seeds, Christ’s cross binds them into one, the Spirit breathes life, and the elect stand as a host for eternity. This revelation hit me like a thunderbolt, tying the lost sheep of Israel to the body of Christ, from Assyria’s conquest to the end of days. It’s not just a story—it’s a seismic truth, demanding we reexamine God’s Word and our place in His field.

I. Scattered: The Seeds of Israel (Step 1)

Ezekiel stood in a valley of dry bones and heard God’s voice: “These bones are the whole house of Israel” (Ezekiel 37:11). Scattered, they cried, “Our hope is lost.” But was it? Scripture shouts no. The northern tribes—ten lost sheep—were carried off by Assyria in 721 BCE, their kings and dynasties devoured by history (Jeremiah 50:6). Not a corner of the earth escaped their dispersion (Deuteronomy 28:63-64), their seed sown among the nations (James 1:1). Judah followed, exiled to Babylon from 606 to 586 BCE, yet returned after 70 years in 539 BCE to fulfill God’s word (Jeremiah 29:10-14). Historians call them “lost,” their bloodlines blurred by centuries. God calls them seeds.

“I will sow the house of Israel and the house of Judah with the seed of man,” declares Jeremiah 31:27—a promise echoed in Hosea 2:23: “I will sow her unto me in the earth.” Psalm 119:176 mourns, “I have gone astray like a lost sheep,” yet Jesus seeks them: “I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel” (Matthew 15:24). Why scatter them? Isaiah 49:6 reveals it: “I will give thee for a light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation unto the end of the earth.” Amos 9:9 adds, “I will sift the house of Israel among all nations,” and Zechariah 10:9 confirms, “I will sow them among the people.” This wasn’t failure—it was divine planting. Like a corn of wheat falling to die (John 12:24), they were buried to bear fruit, sown into every nation to till the soil for God’s kingdom. What looked like loss was the genesis of life.

West Asia:

Mizrahi Jews

Babylonian Jews (Iraqi Jews)

Kurdish Jews

Persian Jews

Yemenite Jews Palestinian Jews Lebanese Jews

Omani Jews Syrian Jews

Subbotniks (Jews from Azerbaijan and Armenia)

Sub-Saharan Africa:

Beta Israel or Falashim (Ethiopian Jews)

Descendants of the Jews of the Bilad el-Sudan (West Africa)

Lemba people in Malawi

South, East, and Central Asia:

Malabar Yehuddim/Cochin Jews (Indian Jews)

Bene Israel (Jews of Mumbai, India)

Bukharan Jews (Jews from Central Asia)

Baghdadi Jews (Jews from Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, and Arab countries)

Bnei Menashe Jews in Manipur and Mizoram in northeastern India) Bene Ephraim (Telugu-speaking Jews of Kottareddipalem in Andhra Pradesh, India)

Chinese Jews (Kaifeng Jews in China)

Pakistani Jews

Afghan Jews

Tamil Thattar Jews in Sri Lanka

Americas:

Sephardic Bnei Anusim

Amazonian Jews

Iquitos Jews

B'nai Moshe (Inca Jews)

Veracruz Jews

Israel:

Ashkenazi Jews Mizrahi Jews
II. Reassembled: One Fold in Christ (Step 2)

Dry bones don’t stay scattered. Ezekiel saw them knit together—bone to bone, sinews and flesh clothing them—yet lifeless (Ezekiel 37:7-8). So it was with Israel’s seed, dead in spirit until the Seed of David arrived. “Concerning His Son Jesus Christ our Lord, which was made of the seed of David according to the flesh” (Romans 1:3), He emerged from Judah’s soil, trained by centuries as a priestly nation (Exodus 19:6) to offer the Lamb. Passover sacrifices (Exodus 12) and the Day of Atonement (Leviticus 16) pointed to Him, the One who “taketh away the sin of the world” (John 1:29), propitiating all (1 John 2:2).

Jesus declared, “Other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd” (John 10:16). Who are these sheep? The scattered seeds of Israel, mingled with Gentiles, now “reconciled in one body by the cross” (Ephesians 2:16). Galatians 3:28 proclaims, “There is neither Jew nor Greek… for ye are all one in Christ Jesus.” The cross stitched flesh to bone, uniting the lost with the found. Israel’s rejection wasn’t a misstep—it was required: “Through their fall salvation is come unto the Gentiles” (Romans 11:11), fulfilling Isaiah 53:3’s despised servant. Christ fell—“except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone” (John 12:24)—and the seeds became one.

This staggers the soul. The dragon of Revelation 12 raged against the woman who birthed the child, his wrath—“the dragon was wroth with the woman” (Revelation 12:17)—fueling anti-Semitism’s bitter persistence. No wonder the world hates Israel; she bore the Seed Satan sought to devour. Yet God’s plan held firm, hiding His treasured ones in the world’s field (Matthew 13:38; Psalm 83:3), awaiting the breath of life.

III. Revived: Life from the Grave (Step 3)

Then came the wind. “Prophesy unto the wind,” God told Ezekiel, “Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live” (Ezekiel 37:9). The bones stood, alive at last. So it was with Israel’s seeds. Scattered and reassembled, they needed the Spirit’s breath, which roared at Pentecost, igniting the Gospel from Jerusalem to the ends of the earth, tracing the paths where Israel’s seeds had fallen—Asia Minor, Rome, beyond.

Isaiah 42:7 promised, “To open the blind eyes, to bring out the prisoners from the prison, and them that sit in darkness.” Luke 1:79 echoes, “To give light to them that sit in darkness and in the shadow of death.” The Gospel took root in seed-sown zones, where the lost sheep wandered (Matthew 15:24), sprouting as “the children of the kingdom” (Matthew 13:38). This wasn’t mere revival—it was resurrection. Once bound in affliction and iron (Psalm 107:10), they rose as the Israel of God (Galatians 6:16), witnesses to His plan (Isaiah 43:10). The Spirit plowed hearts with God’s Word, fulfilling Isaiah 40:5: “The glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together.”

Here the Church emerged, a temple of God (1 Peter 2:5), sown from Christ’s seed to defy the darkness. Satan struck from Pergamos’ throne (Revelation 2:13), where “the seven churches” stood at his root (Revelation 2-3), but the Gospel prevailed, scattering light where Israel’s seeds had prepared the ground. The world awoke because Israel fell.

IV. Army: The Exceeding Great Host (Step 4)

“And they stood upon their feet, an exceeding great army” (Ezekiel 37:10). From scattered seeds to a unified host, Israel’s journey ends in triumph. Song of Songs 6:4 sings, “Thou art… terrible as an army with banners,” a glimpse of Ecclesia—the called-out ones (1 Peter 2:9). This army wields not swords but light, fulfilling Isaiah 49:8: “I will preserve thee… to establish the earth, to cause to inherit the desolate heritages.”

In tribulation’s furnace, they shine. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego (Daniel 3) prefigure the sealed elect (Revelation 7:3-4), unbowed by fire. Here stand the 144,000, “sealed from all the tribes of the children of Israel” (Revelation 7:4-8), redeemed to follow the Lamb on Mount Zion (Revelation 14:1-4). Not just the Church, but Israel’s remnant—12,000 from each tribe—preserved as God’s eschatological promise, fulfilling Romans 11:26: “All Israel shall be saved.” Revelation 18:4 cries, “Come out of her, my people,” and they do, escaping Babylon’s plagues (Luke 21:36), a residue of grace (Romans 9:25-26).

Satan struck from Pergamos (Revelation 2:13), but this host turned a world once hellish—rife with war—into one plowing peace (Isaiah 2:4: “They shall beat their swords into plowshares”). The earth fills with God’s knowledge (Isaiah 11:9), a contrast like heaven to hell, birthed from Israel’s fall with Christ (John 12:24). “To the Jew first” (Romans 1:16) wasn’t exclusion—it was the spark that lit the nations. From dry bones to an exceeding great army, Israel’s scattering became our salvation, a truth vast enough to shake eternity.

Conclusion: Seeds of Today

This vision—seeds scattered, reassembled, revived, and raised—shook me awake. It’s not just Israel’s story; it’s ours. Ezekiel’s dry bones are God’s kingdom seeds, and we stand in their harvest. The lost sheep weren’t forsaken—they were sown. The cross didn’t divide—it united. The elect don’t cower—they conquer. See Israel anew—not abandoned, but foundational; as seeds, falling to bear fruit in a darkening age (John 12:24). God’s plan marches from Assyria to eternity, and we’re in it—an exceeding great army, born of dry bones, alive in Christ. This is the revelation that pierces the soul: God so loved the world, He scattered His people to save it. While many await Romans 11:15’s fulfillment in a distant millennial age, Paul unveils a mystery already unfolding: “For if the casting away of them be the reconciling of the world, what shall the receiving of them be, but life from the dead?” This is the work of regeneration. The Spirit breathes into these bones even now, regenerating the world through Israel’s scattered seeds.

For the covenant belongs to Israel, “to whom pertaineth the adoption, and the glory, and the covenants, and the giving of the law, and the service of God, and the promises; whose are the fathers, and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came” (Romans 9:4-5), anchoring God’s eternal purpose in their enduring call.