Thrown into the World

And not only this, but there was Rebekah also, when she had conceived twins by one man, our father Isaac; for though the twins were not yet born and had not done anything good or bad, so that God’s purpose according to His choice would stand, not because of works but because of Him who calls, Romans 9:10-11  NASB

Choice– Why were you born?  What difference does your life really make in the great scheme of things?  And since you were thrown into this world, not by your own choice, you might also like to ask, “Why am I treated the way that I am since I had no part in the choice to be here?” Who decided that you should live the life you have?  Who determined your point of entry, your culture, your heritage, your inherited trauma?  Certainly not you!  And yet, here you are, victim of circumstances that occurred eons before you were even an idea in someone’s mind.

Paul comments on this unsettling fact.  Before the twins were born, before either one had done anything good or bad, God chose.  And that choice, independent of any voluntary submission, determined the pathway of each child, the inexorable journey of suffering and trauma that led to Jew and Gentile. The inheritance of your existence.

Choice. It’s a term we like to banter about as if it makes up the critical element of being human.  The truth is far more calamitous.  The truth is—you didn’t choose!  You weren’t asked.  Not even consulted.  You were thrown into the mess, cast into the cycle of family, nation and ethnic chaos handed to you without your consent.  And for the most part, who you are and how you are has been determined by when you are and where you are from the moment you were. God’s choice of His people is pregnant with trauma.

“ . . . trauma is not simply the effect of external violence but of an essential incomprehensibility:  . . . so that the wound—the meaning of the Greek trauma—is not directly perceptible.  The shock is ‘a break in the mind’s experience of time.’”[1]

“As bearers of an experience that they cannot fully claim as their own, the Jewish people become an exemplar of the historical sense of having been incomprehensibly chosen to survive.  What returns, then, in both the individual psyche and the structure of Jewish historical experience, is the sense of ‘being chosen for a future that remains, in its promise, yet to be understood.  Chosenness is thus not simply a fact of the past but the experience of being shot into a future that is not entirely one’s own.’”[2]

Fair Warning:  Most non-Jewish want-to-be believers think that joining the Chosen People is participating in a favored and blessed existence.  Perhaps it would be better to be informed about the nature of this “blessing” beforehand.  Then the shock of the ensuring trauma of believing might be more tolerable, even if it can’t quite be understood.

Topical Index:  Chosen People, choice, trauma, Romans 9:10-11

[1]Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg, The Murmuring Deep: Reflections on the Biblical Unconscious, p. 243.

[2]Ibid., p. 244, citing Cathy Caruth, “Traumatic Departures: Survival and History in Freud,” in Trauma and Self, eds. Strozier and Flynn (1996), p. 29.

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Brett Weiner B.B.( brother Brett)

Early in the morning, today with one I foot out the door, to volunteer with Jewish people in a nursing home, or residency, I ask myself why am I doing this? To give them hope.! How does this line up with my walk? And what am I to show to depart the prayer group today.? Romans 4 18. Who in Hope believed against hope, to end that he might become a father of many nations according to that which had been spoken so shall thy seed be…. It’s just the way it is. God’s plan always wins. Whether we know what it is or not. It is not a toss of the dice, to see what ends up. It’s fixed, itch predestination, some say what. Is it really predetermined. Does God really know the outcome. I first thought of national anthem for Israel hope… Tikvah. It is a wonderful song. No matter what we will not be defeated, and he will quit. English translation. I’ve got to love it. Hope you do too.
P. S. It’s scary sometimes oh, how our thoughts are directed. Thanks for reminding me. And leaving me in the situations that you have preordained. Closing thought. I was told that the Hebrew people, are ones who are called to go through something,. Like the Red Sea and then God calls them to it, and sees them through it. Thank you

Richard Bridgan

Chosen… in him… before the foundation of the world…. that we… should be blameless and holy before him… in love… having predestined us to adoption… through Jesus Christ… to himself… according to the good pleasure of his will… to the praise of the glory of his grace… that he bestowed on us… in the beloved… in whom we have redemption… through his blood… the forgiveness of sins… according to the riches of his grace…

Traumatic… good news.

Maddie Basham

Hi Skip
Maybe a ridiculous question but have been through crazy week. I understand what you are saying and the warning but please define or explain “ Non Jewish want-to- be believers”

Laurita Hayes

What if the tables were reversed: what if we got to choose where we came from and who we were, but then could not do anything about it once we chose – could not alter our fate, as the East believes? Yes, they believe a version of this (and New Age teaches this, too) that everybody ‘chose’ their parents and their circumstances, so therefore, not only is their fate sealed: it is their fault things are the way they are, and reincarnation is what people have to change – basically get out of – their karma: their ‘chosen’ ‘destiny’. This is horrible!

With the wonderful open-endedness grace provides, however, along with the powerful reset tool of forgiveness and free gift of justification as well as the offer (to all who do not resist Him) of the full return to our original design of mutual agreement with the Holy Spirit to motivate us with all the power of heaven above, no one has to be ‘stuck’ (“dead in trespasses and sins”) in the past any more.

With the full return to freedom of choice, our future (right along with us), through that salvation, is also freed from that past. At this point, it doesn’t matter what that past is, whether it be slavery in Egypt or a prince of Egypt: all are called to journey alike under the leading of the Holy Spirit to the Promised Land: the New Earth (no, we didn’t get to choose that future, either!). All the choice we have, in fact, is how to segue with the present, but that present determines whether or not that future promise is ours or not: whether or not we return to two-stepping with the will of God FOR US, instead of insisting on the will we think is ‘our own’. There is no such thing as ‘our own’ will: if you believe that, you, along with all those other lost people in the East, just get locked in to choices past that no one can change: you get stuck with the very real bill of that past hung around your neck like a dead albatross.

Who wants to continue to carry choices past? Let us, along with the returning Israelites under Ezra, “stand and confess the sins of the fathers” along with our own, and so rid ourselves of all the curses of choices we didn’t make, as well as all the ones we did, so we can start over again. This time, may I choose to “do the will of my Father which is in heaven”. His will (through obedience to love) is to keep me free to choose: sin just puts me back under (“slavery”) the force of things I do not want (at least in hindsight!). May I stay in His will for me this time, is my prayer.

Judi Baldwin

Re: Fair Warning: The Gentile disciples in the first century looked very much like Torah observant people. They worshiped in the synagogues with the Jewish community, they had no holidays other that those of the synagogue, they maintained the biblical dietary laws and they had reverence for the Temple in Jerusalem. They set the example for how gentiles should live and they were welcomed into the Jewish community…prior to the wars, Roman persecution, anti Torah legislation etc. Yeshua predicted the persecutions. “They will deliver you to tribulation, and will kill you, and you will be hated by all nations because of My name. At that time many will fall away.” Matthew 24:9-12
When we turn away from the commandments, our love for God diminishes, and as our love for God diminishes, we turn further away from the commandments.
For the most part, the Christian life is one of Torah lived out, even if they don’t recognize it. With some exceptions, of course, Christians are known for a high level of integrity, moral character and honesty. They have spread the faith of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob to all nations. They work to see justice done, see the oppressed relieved, to see the hungry fed and to see the kingdom of heaven advanced. They are famous for offering care and assistance to the stranger, orphan and widow. Despite that, the Gentile church has lost its connection to the Torah. The apostles never intended to see the Gentile believers divorced from Judaism. Acts 15 was meant to keep Jews and Gentiles together, not to separate them into a new religion.

Maddie Basham

My point exactly- I now worship with them. Most Messianic Synagogues these days looks just like the church though.

Jeff Stath

Awesome Judi!

Rich Pease

Amazing what God allows!
Amazing how many years I thought
I was calling the shots.
Amazing how many years He allowed
me to think that I was.
Amazing that I lived to tell about it.
Amazing that He was actually calling the
shots all the time!
Amazing what I didn’t know.
Amazing what I do now.
Amazing Who He is!