I want to share this Utube video with you, because I believe that this man is highlighting some very important facts, directly from Scripture (Our Bible):
The Bible identifies the "true Israel" not as all physical descendants of Jacob, but as the faithful remnant of believers who are children of the promise rather than just children of the flesh. According to Romans 9:6–8, "not all who are descended from Israel belong to Israel," meaning physical lineage alone does not define the true people of God; instead, those who are children of promise (like Isaac, not Ishmael) are counted as the true offspring of Abraham. ...
The video gets an important point right at the beginning. Salvation is not based on ethnicity, but on faith. Scripture is clear on that. Romans 2:28–29 says, “For he is not a Jew, which is one outwardly… But he is a Jew, which is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of the heart.” That is true.
Being born Jewish does not save anyone, and it never has.
Romans 11 also teaches that unbelieving Jews are “broken off” because of unbelief. That part is accurate. No one belongs to God’s people apart from Christ. Jesus said plainly, “I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me” ~John 14:6. Up to this point, the teaching lines up with Scripture.
But this is where it begins to go off track. The claim is made that the Church is now “Israel” in a complete replacement sense, and that the modern nation of Israel has no biblical significance at all. That is not what Scripture teaches. Romans 11 cannot be read selectively. Paul asks in Romans 11:1,
“Hath God cast away his people? God forbid.” That alone shuts down the idea that Israel as a people is finished in God’s plan.
He goes further in Romans 11:25–26 and says, “Blindness in part is happened to Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in. And so all Israel shall be saved.”
That points to a future dealing with Israel, not a total replacement. The attempt to redefine “all Israel” as simply all believers ignores the distinction Paul is clearly making in the same passage between Israel and the Gentiles. You cannot erase that distinction without ignoring the context.
The olive tree illustration in Romans 11 also
does not erase Israel. It shows one root of promise, with natural branches representing Israel and wild branches representing Gentiles who are grafted in. But Paul makes a key point that cannot be overlooked. The natural branches can be grafted in again. That means they still have a distinct identity in God’s plan, even while salvation is only through faith in Christ.
Another issue is the claim that there is no future prophetic regathering or significance for Israel. Scripture speaks directly to this. Zechariah 12:10 says, “They shall look upon me whom they have pierced, and they shall mourn for him.” That describes a future turning of Israel to Christ. Ezekiel 36:24–27 says, “I will take you from among the heathen, and gather you… Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you… and I will give you a new heart.” That includes both physical regathering and spiritual renewal. The teaching in the video leans on Deuteronomy 30 but ignores these clear promises where God acts for His name’s sake, not merely human obedience.
There is also the claim that there is no biblical basis for a future temple. Scripture again speaks otherwise. Second Thessalonians 2:3–4 says that the man of sin “sitteth in the temple of God,” which points to a future temple. Daniel 9:27 speaks of sacrifices being stopped again, which requires a functioning system. This does not mean God approves of those sacrifices. Hebrews makes it clear that Christ’s sacrifice is final and sufficient. But the existence of a future temple is not unbiblical, because Scripture itself speaks of it.
Another point that needs correcting is the idea that God has only ever had “one people” in a way that removes all distinctions. Scripture teaches unity in salvation, but not the erasing of all distinctions in God’s plan. First Corinthians 10:32 says, “Give none offence, neither to the Jews, nor to the Gentiles, nor to the church of God.” That is three groups being distinguished. Ephesians 2 does show that both Jew and Gentile are made one in Christ, but unity does not mean sameness in every role or promise.
The bottom line is simple and needs to stay grounded in what Scripture actually says.
Salvation is only through Christ. Jews and Gentiles are one in Him.
Unbelief cuts anyone off from God. At the same time,
Scripture does not teach that Israel has been completely replaced. It does not say that God is finished with ethnic Israel, and it does not deny that there are future prophetic dealings that involve them.