3:1-2
Question 1-Is there any benefit to being Jewish?
Paul, having taught that God shows no partiality, anticipated some questions or objections from the Jews. The first is: If God shows no partiality, is there any advantage to being Jewish?
Paul says yes, there is much advantage. But Paul only takes the time to give one: they were entrusted with the “oracles of God”. An “oracle” is a message from a god or the person who speaks for the god. It is a term the Romans would be familiar with. If you went to the temple of Jupiter or Mars and made an inquiry, an oracle would give you the response that was supposed to have come from the god.
So, God delivered his word to the Jews. He spoke through this prophets to the Jews. And the Jews recorded many of those words. We call them the Old Testament. He entrusted that to the Jews, a great honor and greater responsibility.
It was an honor, because God chose to reveal himself to Israel more completely to Israel than any one else.
It was a responsibility because they were to live according to God’s word and to preserve it. They did this well at times and badly at other times.
Subsequently, God spoke through Jesus, who entrusted his words to the apostles, who were all Jewish. “Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son…”. (Hebrews 1:1)
3:3-4
Question 2 - does the unfaithfulness of the Jews nullify the faithfulness of God?
Most of the Jews rejected Jesus and his words. They were unfaithful to God in this.
Does this nullify God’s faithfulness? Paul says no. God is faithful to fulfill his promises, including the promise of a savior. The unbelief of the Jews is due to their failure, not God’s. God stays true no matter what humans do.
Paul cited Psalm 51:4 as proof. David acknowledged his sin and established the truthfulness of God’s words and the righteousness of his judgment. David was unfaithful and rebelled against God; but God remained faithful.
3:5-8
Question 3 - How Can God Inflict Wrath On Us
The next question Paul anticipates is: if our unrighteousness shows that God is righteous, how can he inflict wrath on us? Is that not unfair? If we do evil to show God is good, is not that a good thing? Does that make God unrighteous?
Paul said no. God is going to judge the world. That is Paul’s assumption and ours. Therefore, he must be righteous and just. And, anyone who accuses Paul of saying otherwise is condemned. The accusation was probably made by Jewish believers who insisted that obedience to the law was essential to salvation.
3:9-20
Conclusion: The Jews Are As Guilty As The Gentiles
Paul begins his conclusion to this section with a rhetorical question: are the Jews better off? In other words, are they excluded from judgment because they have the law?
Paul’s answer is “no”. All are sinners, Jew and Gentile.
To bolster his point, Paul again cited the Old Testament. He combined several Old Testament texts, from Psalms, Proverbs, and Isaiah. He set them out in the text, some quoted, some paraphrased.
These verses state that none are righteous and none seek God. They do not do good, they speak deceptively and vulgarly, they shed blood, and they do not fear God.
And, anyone who accuses Paul of saying otherwise is condemned.
The accusation was probably made by Jewish believers who insisted that obedience to the law was essential to salvation.
The conclusion is that no one is righteous and all are accountable to God.
The law will not justify anyone. It brings knowledge of sin. It was never intended to bring salvation, but to show the need for salvation.