NT Text: Romans 11:9
OT Source(s):
Source: Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Reference Type: Direct Quotation
Connection Method(s): Typology
Significance: Paul applies David's curse on his enemies to unbelieving Israel. Shocking application: Israel's "table" (fellowship, Torah observance) becomes a trap. The psalm is messianic (see 15:3), so Christ pronounces this curse on those who reject him. Yet the curse is not final. Beale/Carson identify multiple layers of contextual significance. First, Psalm 69:6-8 reveals that "the hostility that the psalmist experiences comes from his own household and family." Paul may suggest that "Gentile believers in Rome may have to experience what both the Messiah and David before him faced: rejection from those close to them." Second, Psalm 69:30-31 points to vindication: "The psalmist's lament turns finally to the hope of deliverance. He thus announces, 'I will praise the name of God with song, and I will magnify him with thanksgiving.' The suffering of Christ anticipates his deliverance." This suffering-then-vindication pattern shapes Paul's theology of Israel's temporary hardening followed by eschatological salvation. Additionally, the "table" curse bears particular significance as it "reflects Israel's exclusive table fellowship"—"a dimension of Israel's pursuit of the law (9:31), an expression of a commitment to 'works' that set it apart from the Gentiles (11:6)." The intertestamental sources demonstrate that exclusive Jewish table fellowship was an expression of ethnic boundary maintenance. Paul treats the "table" curse as judgment on Israel's rejection of Christ through maintenance of ethnic separation.
NT Use Pattern: Ironic / Inverted — David's imprecation against his enemies (Psalm 69:22-23) becomes the judgment on hardened Israel. The covenant insider's curse against outsiders is reread as a curse on the covenant insider — a striking covenantal reversal.
Anchor Text: Ps 69 — The Reproaches