Drew
Member
You don't seem to realize that you are begging the very question at issue. In your first sentence you appear to assume that a concern with "individual election" has already been established. But this is precisely what is at issue here. The rest of your post is similar - you appear to be "asking me to simply take your word on it" when you write "All you have to do to see that Paul is talking about individual election more then its national impications". Surely you realize that this is very issue on the table.mondar said:Drew said:A follow-on to my previous post. I suspect that someone could try to argue that the Old Testament allusion to "one serving the other" constitutes a sudden transition from the rather obvious "nation-level" treatment of the preceding lines to the specificity of Esau and Jacob as individuals. I had not really dealt with that possibilty but intend to.
I dont see such an effort as being pertinent to our present discussion. Abraham was chosen, there were national promises included in his individual election. God said to him that he would make of him a great nation. However, since that material is not quoted by Paul either, I dont see how it is pertinent to Pauls discussion. All you have to do to see that Paul is talking about individual election more then its national impications (but not to the exclusion of national impications) is to look at what Paul chose to quote, and what he did not quote.
I am constructing a detailed and comprehensive argument about the whole Esau / Jacob thing. I claim that the argument makes a strong case that the reference to a promise in relation to these two individuals is really not about them as individuals at all, but rather about two nations that issue from them. Of course, even I would grant that there is indeed a very limited sense in which the Esau / Jacob promise is "about individuals". But, I intend to show that the substantial underying point that Paul has in mind is about nations.