Monday, May 4, 2026

Are the Elect Only the Jews? What Does the Bible Say?

 Some teach that when the Bible speaks of “the elect,” it is referring only to the Jewish people—and that the Church has already been removed from the earth.

It is often said with certainty.

But let us slow down and ask a simple question:

Where does the Bible clearly say that the elect are only the Jews?

Not assumed.

Not implied by a system.

But plainly stated.

Because if we are going to divide the Word, we must divide it rightly.

What Does “Elect” Mean?

The word “elect” means chosen.

The question is not whether God has chosen Israel—He has.

But the question is:

Has God also chosen those who are in Christ?

The New Testament answers that very clearly.

The Elect in the New Testament Church

Peter writes to believers—not to a national Israel—but to scattered Christians:

“Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through sanctification of the Spirit…”

1 Peter 1:2 (KJV)

Who is he writing to?

Believers in Christ.

He calls them elect.

A few verses later:

“But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation…”

1 Peter 2:9 (KJV)

That language was once used of Israel, but here it is clearly applied to the Church.

Not replacing Israel—but showing that those in Christ are also part of God’s chosen people.

Paul Makes It Plain

The apostle Paul leaves little room for confusion:

“Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God’s elect? It is God that justifieth.”

Romans 8:33 (KJV)

Who is he talking about?

Those who are justified in Christ.

That is not limited to one ethnicity.

That is every believer.

And then:

“Even us, whom he hath called, not of the Jews only, but also of the Gentiles.”

Romans 9:24 (KJV)

Not Jews only.

But also Gentiles.

One People in Christ

This is where many miss the heart of the Gospel.

God has not created two separate redeemed peoples—one Jewish and one Christian.

In Christ, He has made one.

“There is neither Jew nor Greek… for ye are all one in Christ Jesus.”

Galatians 3:28 (KJV)

And then this powerful statement:

“And if ye be Christ’s, then are ye Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.”

Galatians 3:29 (KJV)

Let that sink in.

If you belong to Christ, you are counted in the promise.

What About Matthew 24 and “The Elect”?

Now we come to a key passage:

“And he shall send his angels… and they shall gather together his elect…”

Matthew 24:31 (KJV)

Some say, “That must be the Jews.”

But the text does not say that.

It simply says the elect.

And when we interpret Scripture with Scripture, we find that the elect includes all who belong to God—Jew and Gentile alike.

An Illustration: The Olive Tree

Paul gives us a powerful picture in Romans 11.

Israel is described as an olive tree.

Some branches (unbelieving Jews) are broken off.

And Gentile believers are grafted in.

“And thou, being a wild olive tree, wert graffed in among them…”

Romans 11:17 (KJV)

Not a separate tree.

Not a different person.

One tree.

One people of God.

A Hard but Necessary Truth

We must be careful not to divide what God has joined together.

Yes, God has promises for Israel.

Yes, God has a plan that includes the Jewish people.

But Scripture does not teach that the word “elect” is limited to them alone.

To say that requires reading something into the text that is not plainly there.

A Final Word from a Country Preacher

I say this with care, because these are not small matters.

If we redefine “the elect” to exclude the Church from passages where Christ speaks to His followers, we risk misunderstanding what He is warning us about.

And misunderstanding leads to unpreparedness.

The safest place to stand is not on a system, but on the clear teaching of Scripture.

And Scripture says this:

God has a people.

They are called the elect.

And they are made up of all who belong to Christ—

Jew and Gentile alike.

Closing

So I ask again—

Where does the Bible clearly say the elect are only the Jews?

Search it.

Study it.

Let Scripture answer.

Because in the end, what matters is not what we have been told…

But what God has said.

Tribulation Is Not the Wrath of God: Understanding the Difference

 There is a great deal of confusion in the Church today about two words that are often spoken as if they mean the same thing—Tribulation and the Wrath of God.

They are not the same.

And if we do not rightly divide the Word of Truth, we will either live in unnecessary fearor worse, we will be unprepared for what God has clearly told us is coming.

Let me say it plainly:

Tribulation is what the world and the powers of darkness do to God’s people.

The Wrath of God is what God does in judgment upon a rebellious world.

Those are two very different things.

What Is Tribulation?

Jesus did not hide this from us. He told us exactly what to expect:

“In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.”

John 16:33 (KJV)

Tribulation is not new.

The early Church faced it. The apostles lived it. Many died under it.

“We must through much tribulation enter into the kingdom of God.”

Acts 14:22 (KJV)

Tribulation is pressure. It is persecution. It is hardship brought about by a fallen world that rejects Christ.

It is not God pouring out His anger.

It is the world pushing back against righteousness.

An Illustration: The Early Church

Look at the early believers.

They were beaten. Imprisoned. Killed.

Was that the Wrath of God?

No.

That was tribulation.

The world hated them because it hated Christ.

“If the world hate you, ye know that it hated me before it hated you.”

John 15:18 (KJV)

Stephen was stoned.

Paul was beaten and imprisoned.

The Church was scattered.

That was not God judging them—that was the world persecuting them.

What Is the Wrath of God?

Now let us look at something entirely different.

The Wrath of God is not persecution—it is judgment.

“For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men…”

Romans 1:18 (KJV)

This is not man acting.

This is God responding.

The Wrath of God is holy, just, and directed toward sin and rebellion.

An Illustration: Noah and the Flood

Let me give you a clear picture.

In the days of Noah, two things were happening at the same time.

Noah was building the ark in a world that mocked him.

That was tribulation.

But when the rain began to fall and the fountains of the deep were broken up—that was the Wrath of God.

“And the flood was forty days upon the earth…”

Genesis 7:17 (KJV)

Here is the key:

Noah went through the tribulation of his day—but he was preserved from the wrath.

God did not pour His judgment on Noah.

God made a way of escape.

Another Illustration: Lot in Sodom

Consider Lot.

He lived in a wicked city. His righteous soul was vexed daily.

“For that righteous man dwelling among them… vexed his righteous soul from day to day…”

2 Peter 2:8 (KJV)

That was tribulation—living in a sinful, oppressive environment.

But when judgment came:

“The Lord rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah brimstone and fire…”

Genesis 19:24 (KJV)

That was the Wrath of God.

And what did God do first?

He removed Lot.

Tribulation he endured.

Wrath he was delivered from.

Why This Matters Today

There are many who say, “We won’t go through anything difficult because God loves us.”

That is not what Scripture teaches.

Jesus said:

“Then shall they deliver you up to be afflicted, and shall kill you…”

Matthew 24:9 (KJV)

That is tribulation.

But when it comes to the Wrath of God, Scripture gives a different promise:

“For God hath not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ.”

1 Thessalonians 5:9 (KJV)

We are not appointed to wrath.

But we are called to endure tribulation.

A Simple Way to Remember

Let me make it as plain as I can:

  • Tribulation = The world afflicting the believer
  • Wrath = God judging the unbelieving world

Tribulation refines the believer.

Wrath punishes the rebel.

An Everyday Illustration (Storms are not tribulations and lightening strikes are not judgment, this is only an illustration)

Think of it like this.

A storm comes through a town.

The wind howls. The rain beats down. The pressure is intense.

That is tribulation—everyone feels the storm.

But then lightning strikes a specific building and sets it ablaze.

That is judgment—targeted, deliberate.

The storm is not the same as the strike.

A Final Word

We must not confuse these two things.

If we think tribulation is the wrath of God, we will live in fear of God instead of trusting Him.

If we think we will escape all tribulation, we will be unprepared when it comes.

Jesus never promised we would avoid tribulation.

He promised He would be with us in it.

“When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee…”

Isaiah 43:2 (KJV)

And when the Wrath of God is poured out, He will deal justly—and He will keep His own.

Closing Thought from a Country Preacher

I have seen too many believers shaken because they expected an easy road.

But the road has never been easy.

The cross was not easy.

The early Church did not have it easy.

And we will not have it easy either.

But take heart—

Tribulation may comebut wrath is not our portion.

Stay faithful. Stay ready. Stay grounded in the Word.

Because the difference between the two is not just theological—

It is the difference between being refinedand being judged.