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Romans 11:20, referring to Israel, says:

"Granted. But they were broken off because of unbelief, and you stand by faith. Do not be arrogant, but tremble." (NIV)

Romans 11:22, referring to Gentiles, says:

"Consider therefore the kindness and sternness of God: sternness to those who fell, but kindness to you, provided that you continue in his kindness. Otherwise, you also will be cut off." (NIV)

What do the terms 'broken off' and 'cut off' mean in these two verses in context? It sounds as though Israel was once a saved nation, but everyone ended up lost due to their unbelief. But this can't be true because there were still faithful Jews around the time of Jesus' incarnation, e.g. Mary and Joseph, Elizabeth and her husband. At Pentecost thousands of Jews put their faith in Jesus and later Saul (the apostle Paul) came to faith in Jesus.

This chapter can't therefore refer to individual Jews being cut off and never being able to find salvation in the Messiah. So who was 'broken off' in verse 20? And what were they broken off from? They couldn't have been cut off from Jesus because He wasn't incarnated in the Old Testament days, so they couldn't have been grafted into Him, could they?

And whatever 'broken off' means, this presumably explains the meaning of the possibility of gentiles being 'cut off' in verse 22?

Susan
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Daniel275Ens
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  • @susan Just wondering why Susan's name appears as editor of this question when I (Marisa) edited Daniel's original? :-) – Marisa Apr 07 '16 at 14:15
  • @Marisa: You did indeed edit the original, and if you review the editing history, it captures your edit, but Susan edited it later by editing the tag. Hence, her name will appear as she was the last one to edit. –  Apr 07 '16 at 15:06
  • Thanks. No problem. It just had me baffled. I'm not sure where the editing history tab is, I'll navigate around and I'm sure to find it. – Marisa Apr 07 '16 at 16:05
  • daniel275Ens - I know this is insufficient - but A.): "cut off, כרת" is incredibly significant in Judaism, and idiomatic. B.) There are several ways a person could be "cut off" from Israel. C.) More literally, it means *"to put down, or take down"* - like when initiating a covenant, you "take it down"; D.) The term becomes relevant in Romans - in the context of the Passover, (from Exodus 12:15 & 19) - *where God, very explicitly, says they would be cut off - if they did not properly remember and observe the Passover*.
  • – elika kohen Apr 07 '16 at 16:55
  • @Marisa If you click on the "edited 12 hours ago" text above my name, you will see the edit history. – Susan Apr 08 '16 at 00:23
  • @elikakohen Thanks for that Elika. Daniel asked the question initially but I edited it because it's something I wanted to know. Your comment provides a few extra leads to follow. Thanks again. – Marisa Apr 08 '16 at 09:40