Worthy Brief - May 25, 2026
Worthy Brief - May 25, 2026
You were grafted in to provoke Israel to jealousy!
Romans 11:11-15 I say then, have they stumbled that they should fall? Certainly not! But through their fall, to provoke them to jealousy, salvation has come to the Gentiles. 12 Now if their fall is riches for the world, and their failure riches for the Gentiles, how much more their fullness! 13 For I speak to you Gentiles; inasmuch as I am an apostle to the Gentiles, I magnify my ministry, 14 if by any means I may provoke to jealousy those who are my flesh and save some of them. 15 For if their being cast away is the reconciling of the world, what will their acceptance be but life from the dead?
Paul asks a question that carries more weight than many believers realize: "Have they stumbled that they should fall? Certainly not!" [Romans 11:11]. Israel stumbled, but Israel was not discarded. A partial hardening came, but not a final rejection. Paul refuses to let Gentile believers turn Israel's stumbling into a basis for Gentile superiority.
Then he reveals something stunning: "Through their fall, to provoke them to jealousy, salvation has come to the Gentiles" [Romans 11:11]. This echoes the Song of Moses, where God says, "I will provoke them to jealousy by those who are not a nation" [Deuteronomy 32:21]. Gentile salvation is not the end of the story. It is part of God's redemptive strategy within the story. The nations were brought near by mercy, not to forget Israel or replace Israel, but to become living witnesses of Yeshua (Jesus) in a way that awakens Israel to her own King.
"Jealousy" sounds small in English, as though Paul were speaking of petty envy. But in the covenant story, jealousy is the piercing recognition that something precious, something promised, something deeply connected to your own story, is being received by another. Paul is saying the mercy of God displayed among the nations should cause Israel to look again at Yeshua and recognize the life, blessing, and nearness promised by her own prophets.
This is the calling most believers forget. Gentiles were not merely saved from sin; they were brought into a priestly witness before Israel and the world. Paul says Gentiles were once "aliens from the commonwealth of Israel and strangers from the covenants of promise" [Ephesians 2:12], but through the blood of Yeshua, those who were far off have been brought near [Ephesians 2:13]. Near to God. Near to the covenants. Near to the promises. Near to the olive tree. And that nearness carries responsibility -- because nearness must never become arrogance. Paul warns the grafted-in branches: "Do not boast against the branches… You do not support the root, but the root supports you" [Romans 11:18].
Israel will not be stirred to her Messiah by believers who boast over her. She will be stirred by a people filled with the Spirit -- humble, holy, grateful, rooted in the Scriptures, and radiant with the life of Israel's King. To provoke Israel to holy longing is not to perform Jewishness as a costume. It is to live so deeply in Yeshua that the fragrance of the King becomes unmistakable -- the joy of forgiveness, the fire of the Spirit, the beauty of holiness, the tenderness of mercy -- until Israel sees Gentiles walking in the blessings promised through her own Messiah and begins to long for Him.
Paul's vision is not small. He says Israel's stumbling brought riches to the world, then asks, "How much more their fullness!" [Romans 11:12]. The Greek word is pleroma — fullness, completion, the filling up of what is lacking. If mercy came to the nations through Israel's stumbling, what kind of restoration will come when Israel recognizes her King? Gentile salvation is not triumph over Israel's failure. It is a signpost pointing toward the fullness of the Kingdom.
So the question is not only, “Am I saved?” It is also, "Does my life in Yeshua make Him beautiful to the people through whom He came? Does my faith carry gratitude for the root? Does my love bless Israel without flattery and pray for her salvation without presumption? Does my witness carry the humility of one who was brought near only by mercy?"
The Gentile calling is higher than many have imagined. It was never about replacing Israel. It was always about revealing Yeshua -- His life, His sacrifice, His mercy, and His love -- so clearly, so humbly, and so unmistakably that our witness becomes a Spirit-filled invitation for Israel to behold her King.
You were brought near not by birthright or merit, but by the covenant faithfulness of the God who grafted you into His ancient olive tree. Let that mercy shape how you pray, how you worship, and how you carry yourself before Israel and the nations. You are not called to boast over the branches. You are called to burn so brightly with the life of Yeshua that your joy, humility, holiness, and compassion awaken a holy ache in every heart that beholds it. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem. Bless the root that holds you. Let your life testify that the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob is still keeping covenant, still gathering His people, and still calling the whole earth home through the mercy of His Son.
Your family in the Lord with much agape love,
George (Maryland) & Baht Rivka (Arad, Israel)
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