Blaming Jews or the Church for our problems? What does God say about your position and identity?
"Marks of Israel" as a wise parable to share
Are you with in the right attitude to blame “Jews” or the “Church” for the problems? What does God say about your position and identity?
Lets play a game of “who is who” to maybe get one thinking… This is as a parable to those who already know and forgot the marks of Israel:
Is it because they who are in Christ “dash the nations in pieces as a potter’s vessel”?
Well are they the problem because they’re God’s battle axe?
Is it because they’re God’s judges and rulers (the scepter will not depart from Judah)?
Is it because through YHWH they are evil unto those that are evil?
Is it because they are a flame that entirely devours the stubble?
Didn’t God say He would send punishment upon you if your nation rebelled from His laws (70% of his laws are nationalist, and obeying them is true freedom)?
LETS DIVE INTO THIS STUDY — LETS GO!
A reflection from the Priory of Salem - Institute of Theology
https://celticorthodoxy.com/2026/05/blaming-jews-or-the-church/
In many modern religious and political arguments, people are often pushed into narrow categories. Some say, “the Church is the problem.” Others say, “the Jews are the problem.” Still others argue endlessly over whether the Church has “replaced” Israel, or whether all Biblical promises must be compressed into one modern religious or ethnic label.
But perhaps the deeper question is this: what if Scripture itself refuses to be placed into such a small box?
The Bible speaks of Israel thousands of times. It also speaks of Judah, of the House of Israel, of the House of Judah, of Joseph, Ephraim, Manasseh, the Davidic sceptre, the scattered tribes, the covenant people, and the nations that would bear certain prophetic marks in history.
We see these undeniably and unanimously known to be fulfilled by the Christian nations. Each of God’s prophecies listed below will show this concretely.
We can show you the word “weekend” preserved the Sabbath on Saturday for all True Israel to know God’s day and be free to keep it, in all generations. Read the book for free:
“Saturday Rest: Embracing the Christian Sabbath in Orthodox Faith“
It shows down through the ages that the Saturday Sabbath has been officially protected in Christendom. The preservation of the Sabbath was the ultimate sign of God’s people, as it says. Free download: https://celticorthodoxy.com/2015/05/honoring-of-the-sabbath-in-the-historic-orthodox-church/
From a Celto Saxon Israel perspective, this is not merely an ethnic slogan or political claim. It is a call to let the Scriptures speak in their own categories. If the Bible distinguishes Israel from Judah, then our theology should not erase that distinction. If the prophets speak of both houses continuing in significance until the full restoration under Christ, then we should not flatten the whole matter into a simple argument of “Jew versus Church.”
Beyond the Narrow Argument of “Jew” and “Church”
One of the great problems in modern theological debate is that people often reduce the Biblical story totwo terms: “Jewish” and “Christian.” Then they fight over whether one replaces the other.
This is where discussions of replacement theology often become too shallow. The real question is not whether “the Church replaced the Jews.” The deeper question is whether the Scriptures themselves describe a broader covenant people, a divided kingdom, a scattered Israel, a distinct Judah, and a prophetic restoration that culminates in Christ.
The word “Jew” appears only a limited number of times in the Old Testament, while “Israel” appears throughout the entire prophetic and covenantal structure of Scripture. That does not diminish Judah. Rather, it restores the larger Biblical framework in which Judah, Israel, Joseph, Ephraim, Manasseh, and the nations all have their appointed place under the sovereignty of God.
Is Israel the Problem — or Is Forgetfulness the Problem?
If people say “the Church is the problem,” they may be missing the Biblical meaning of the assembly, the congregation, and the covenant people of God. If people say “the Jews are the problem,” they may be falling into an unjust and unbiblical scapegoating of Judah. But if people ask, “What about Israel?” then the Scriptures open a larger field of inquiry.
Perhaps the problem is not Israel, Judah, or the Church. Perhaps the problem is our forgetfulness of the full Biblical picture.
This is why the older British Israelism discussion, when handled responsibly and Scripturally, should not be treated merely as a curiosity. It asks whether the prophetic marks of Israel can be traced in history, and whether the covenant promises to Israel were fulfilled in ways that many modern systems of theology have overlooked.
Likewise, the British Israel book tradition preserved many arguments, references, and prophetic identifications that deserve to be studied carefully, not as racial hostility, but as a Biblical and historical inquiry into covenant identity, national responsibility, and divine providence.
The Prophetic Marks of Israel
The following framework may be understood as a parable, a provocation, or a Scriptural study prompt. It asks the reader to consider whether true Israel would be known by certain Biblical marks. These are not offered as a weapon against Judah, nor as an attack on the Church, but as a call to restore the language of Scripture itself.
See also: Marks of Israel.
True Israel would undeniably be known to have a future appointed place prepared by God (2 Samuel 7:10).
True Israel would undeniably be known to dwell in the isles afar off (Isaiah 41:1; Jeremiah 31:10).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be saved from their enemies (Luke 1:71).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be delivered out of the hands of their enemies (Luke 1:74).
True Israel would undeniably be known to develop into a great and mighty nation (Genesis 18:18).
True Israel would undeniably be known to become a company of nations (Genesis35:11; Genesis 48:19).
True Israel would undeniably be known to have a great name among the nations (Genesis 12:2).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be exceedingly fruitful and multiplied (Genesis 28:14; Genesis 49:22–26; Numbers 23:10; Isaiah 27:6;Hosea 1:10; Zechariah 10:8).
True Israel would undeniably be known to spread abroad west, east, north, and south (Genesis 28:14; Isaiah 43:5–6).
True Israel would undeniably be known to retain the throne and lineage of David (Jeremiah 33:17, 21, 26; Ezekiel 37:24;2 Samuel 7:13–29; Psalm 89:20–37).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be first among the nations (Genesis 49:22–26; Deuteronomy 4:7; Deuteronomy 26:19; Deuteronomy28:13; Jeremiah 31:7).
True Israel would undeniably be known to continue as a nation forever (2 Samuel 7:16, 24, 29; 1 Chronicles 17:22–27; Jeremiah 31:35–37).
True Israel would undeniably be known to dwell alone as a distinct people (Numbers 23:9;Deuteronomy 33:28).
True Israel would undeniably be known to possess a new homeland (2 Samuel 7:10; 1 Chronicles 17:9).
True Israel would undeniably be known to dwell northwest of Palestine (Isaiah 49:12; Jeremiah 3:18).
True Israel would undeniably be known to possess the gates of their enemies (Genesis 22:17).
True Israel would undeniably be known to dwell in islands and coastlands (Isaiah 41:1–2;Isaiah 49:1–3; Isaiah 51:5; Jeremiah 31:7–10).
True Israel would undeniably be known to receive a new name (Isaiah 62:2; Isaiah 65:15; Hosea 2:17).
True Israel would undeniably be known to enter into the New Covenant faith (Jeremiah 31:31–34; Hebrews8:13; Luke 1:77; Galatians 3:13).
True Israel would undeniably be known to lose visible trace of their lineage (Hosea 1:9–10; Hosea 2:6, 17; Isaiah 42:16).
True Israel would undeniably be known to produce two great rival nations from Joseph (Genesis 48:13, 20).
True Israel would undeniably be known to carry the Gospel throughout the world(Genesis 28:14; Isaiah 43:21; Micah 5:7; Isaiah 43:10–12).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be God’s heritage forever (Deuteronomy 4:20; Isaiah 43:21; Micah 7:14–18; Hosea 2:19,23).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be found under the New Covenant rather than circumcision (Hebrews 8:6–9; Acts 15:19–29; Galatians 3:13).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be a kingdom of priests and a holy nation (Exodus 19:6; Leviticus20:26; Isaiah 61:6; Isaiah 62:12).
True Israel would undeniably be known to possess the Stone of Israel (Genesis 49:24).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be filled with the wealth of the Gentiles (Isaiah 60:5, 16; Isaiah 61:6).
True Israel would undeniably be known to colonize desolate places (Isaiah 49:8; Isaiah 54:3).
True Israel would undeniably be known to girdle or encompass the earth (Jeremiah 10:16;Psalm 74:2; Acts 17:26).
True Israel would undeniably be known to have the Lord fight for them against their enemies (Isaiah 41:8–14; Isaiah 49:25–26; Isaiah 54:15–17).
True Israel would undeniably be known to possess both God’s Spirit and His Word (Isaiah 44:3;Isaiah 59:21; Haggai 2:5).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be blessed when blessed and cursed when cursed (Genesis 12:3; Numbers 24:9).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be appointed for God’s glory (Isaiah 46:13; Isaiah 49:3; Isaiah60:1–2).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be sown throughout the earth(Hosea 2:23; Jeremiah 31:27; Zechariah 10:9).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be as the sand of the sea in multitude (Hosea 1:10).
True Israel would undeniably be known to retain the sceptre of Judah until Shiloh comes (Genesis 49:10; Ezekiel 21:27).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be a people of inheritance (Deuteronomy4:20).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be a peculiar people(Deuteronomy 14:2).
True Israel would undeniably be known to receive blessings when obedient (Deuteronomy 28:1).
True Israel would undeniably be known to receive chastisement when disobedient (Deuteronomy 28:15).
True Israel would undeniably beknown to dwell safely (Deuteronomy 33:28).
True Israel would undeniably beknown to be the servant nation (Isaiah 41:8).
True Israel would undeniably beknown to be a blind servant (Isaiah 42:19).
True Israel would undeniably beknown to be a deaf people (Isaiah 42:19).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be a protected people (Isaiah 54:17).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be a perpetual nation (Jeremiah 31:36).
True Israel would undeniably beknown to possess a perpetual throne (Jeremiah 33:20).
True Israel would undeniably be known to be a sifted people among the nations (Amos 9:9).
Conclusion: Let the Scriptures Speak
This study is not an invitation to hatred, scapegoating, or carnal boasting. It is an invitation to Biblical precision. If Scripture says Israel, let us ask what Israel means. If Scripture says Judah, let us not erase Judah. If Scripture speaks of two houses, let us not collapse them into one modern label. If Scripture speaks of the Church, the covenant, the Gospel, and the nations, let us allow the whole counsel of God to stand.
The argument is not that “the Church is the problem” or that “the Jews are the problem.” The deeper question is whether modern theology has forgotten the full covenantal map of Scripture. Lets see what God says and build from there.
Perhaps the question should be asked differently: if true Israel was to be marked in history by Scripture itself, then who bears those marks — and what responsibility comes with them?


