Am (עַם, H5971) — people. Not a religious category but a covenant family. Who is the people of Israel? How does the believer from the nations (goy) relate to it? And what does "being grafted into the noble olive tree" mean?
The question of the people of Israel is not a historical question — it is a current covenant question. Two houses, one covenant, one Melech.
After this study you will understand:- You know the Hebrew term am (H5971) and its distinction from goy (nation) and kahal (assembly).
- You understand the doctrine of the two houses (Ephraim and Judah) and how Ezekiel 37:16–22 describes their reunion.
- You recognize how Romans 11 (the wild olive branch) and Ephesians 2 (the dividing wall broken down) describe the position of believers from the nations.
- You can refute the replacement-theological claim that the Church has replaced Israel from the base text.
- You know what it means that you as a believer are part of Am Yisrael.
Read the passages below slowly — as orientation, not as study. Ask yourself: what do I already know about this subject, and what do I expect to learn?
Am (עַם, H5971) — people. Not a religious category but a covenant family. Who is the people of Israel? How does the believer from the nations (goy) relate to it? And what does "being grafted into the noble olive tree" mean?
The question of the people of Israel is not a historical question — it is a current covenant question. Two houses, one covenant, one Melech.
After this study you will understand:- You know the Hebrew term am (H5971) and its distinction from goy (nation) and kahal (assembly).
- You understand the doctrine of the two houses (Ephraim and Judah) and how Ezekiel 37:16–22 describes their reunion.
- You recognize how Romans 11 (the wild olive branch) and Ephesians 2 (the dividing wall broken down) describe the position of believers from the nations.
- You can refute the replacement-theological claim that the Church has replaced Israel from the base text.
- You know what it means that you as a believer are part of Am Yisrael.
Read the passages below slowly — as orientation, not as study. Ask yourself: what do I already know about this subject, and what do I expect to learn?
Am — Covenant Family, Not Nation
The Hebrew word for the covenant people is עַם (am, H5971) — one of the most charged words in the Tanakh. It appears more than 1,800 times and carries a meaning not fully transferable into Western languages. Am is not a neutral word for "people" or "nation" — it is a term of kinship and covenant. An am is a family that has grown into a community, bound together by a common Father, a common history, and a shared covenant.
Scripture makes a fundamental distinction between two concepts that in Western translations often converge under "people" or "nation":
The transition from goy to am is the most radical identity shift a person can undergo. It is the movement from outsider to family member — from someone who belongs to a people by geography or ethnicity to someone who is received into the family of God through covenant and the Father's blood. Ephesians 2:19 describes precisely this: from strangers and aliens (goy category) to fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God (am category).
Paleo-Hebrew: Ayin-Mem
Gematria — Am and the Covenant Numbers
The Noble Olive Tree — The Typological Heart
The most powerful illustration of the am concept in the NT is found in Romans 11 — Paul's olive tree metaphor. This metaphor summarizes the entire theological movement of Scripture in one image: root, trunk, noble branches, broken-off branches, and grafted wild branches. It is not allegory without canonical ground — it is the most precise description of the relationship between Israel and believers from the nations that Scripture knows.
After Romans 11:17–24 · Ezekiel 37:15–23 · Ephesians 2:12–19
Ruth — The Canonical Type-Image of the Grafting
Before Paul works out the olive tree metaphor in Romans 11, the Torah already gives a beautiful canonical type-image of the transition from goy to am: the book of Ruth. Ruth the Moabitess is not an Israelite — she is a goyah, a woman from the nations. But her words to Naomi describe the conscious, voluntary transition to the covenant people:
The Mixed Multitude — Exodus 12:38
The Two Houses — Ezekiel 37
The eschatological restoration of the am has a specific double structure that Western theology has largely ignored. The prophet Ezekiel describes in chapter 37:15–23 the reunion of two sticks — the stick of Judah (the Southern Kingdom, which remained but did not recognize the Messiah) and the stick of Joseph/Ephraim (the Northern Kingdom, which was scattered among the nations and lost its identity).
YHWH says: "Behold, I will take the stick of Joseph that is in the hand of Ephraim, and the tribes of Israel associated with him, and I will join with it the stick of Judah, and make them one stick." (verse 19) One stick. One am. The two houses are restored to the complete covenant family — Judah and Ephraim together, under one Melech: the Davidic Messiah (verse 24). This is the ultimate definition of Am Yisrael in its eschatological fullness.
Yeshua — Personified Israel
The relationship between Yeshua and the people of Israel goes deeper than that of Savior to people. Yeshua is Israel in its most complete form — the true Firstfruit of the covenant people who accomplished everything that the people as a whole could not accomplish. The prophetic echo that expresses this most powerfully stands in Matthew 2:15: "So that what was spoken by the prophet might be fulfilled: 'Out of Egypt I called my Son.'" Matthew here cites Hosea 11:1 — a text about the people of Israel. He applies it to Yeshua. This is not allegory but typological exegesis: Yeshua recapitulates the history of His people in His own life.
Two Dangers — Replacement Theology and Rootless Universalism
The canonical reality of the am is threatened by two opposing distortions. Both remove the student from the text — in opposite directions — and both are historically traceable as post-canonical theological shifts:
| The Western Misconception | The Canonical Reality |
|---|---|
| The "Church" is a new, universal people that has taken the place of Israel. God is done with the physical people of Israel. | There is only one covenant people (am): Israel. Believers from the nations are grafted into it — they do not form a new tree. Romans 11:1: "Has God rejected his people (laos, Greek for am)? By no means!" Jeremiah 31:35–37: Israel will cease to be a people only when the stars disappear. |
| Non-Jewish believers have nothing to do with the national identity or culture of Israel. | Ephesians 2:12–19: before the blood they were "alienated from the commonwealth of Israel" — after the blood they are "fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God." The identity shift is from outside to inside the am. |
| God's promises to the people have now "spiritually" passed to Christians — the land, the feasts, and the Torah are outdated. | Romans 11:29: "The gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable." The covenant promise to the physical people of Israel is irrevocable. The Torah is the life structure of the covenant people — it has not been replaced but deepened by the Spirit (Jeremiah 31:33; Ezekiel 36:27). |
| Culture, feast times, and Torah guidelines do not matter — faith is individual and universal. | God is not building a culture-less world religion. He has chosen one specific people with a specific culture, specific feast times (moadim, Leviticus 23), and a specific life structure (Torah). Whoever belongs to the am adapts to the culture of the Father's house. |
| The wild branch can say: "Now that I am grafted in, I am the real Israel — the old branches no longer matter." | Romans 11:18 — Paul's most direct warning: "Do not boast against the branches. And if you do boast, know that you do not support the root, but the root supports you." Grafting does not give superiority — it gives participation in the existing rich root of the covenants. |
Translation Warning — Ecclesia as "Church"
The translation choice of the Greek ecclesia (ἐκκλησία) as "church" is one of the most far-reaching translation losses that has made the am identity invisible. Ecclesia is in the Septuagint the standard translation of the Hebrew קָהָל (qahal) — the assembly of Israel. Acts 7:38 speaks of the ecclesia in the wilderness at Sinai: that is Israel. The "church" as a new institution separate from the am of Israel is a post-canonical construction. Label: "church" as a translation of ecclesia is translation loss — restore: the assembly of Israel, the called am.
A historical proof of how deep this shift runs is offered by the word Christian itself. The Greek Christianoi (Χριστιανοί) was a foreign label — applied by Greek and Roman outsiders in Antioch to the qahal that gathered around the Mashiach of Israel. The word appears only three times in the entire Renewed Covenant (Acts 11:26; 26:28; 1 Peter 4:16) and was not used by the believers themselves as a self-designation. The movement in Antioch consisted of Jews and former Gentiles who studied Torah together and celebrated the moadim — from the am identity. Paul even refuses to adopt the Roman legal label when Agrippa addresses him with it (Acts 26:28–29). Peter uses the word exclusively as the name of a legal charge under Nero — he says: bear that charge as a badge of honor. Canonical · Acts 11:26; 26:28–29; 1 Peter 4:16
What in the second century began as the hijacking of this foreign label by Rome and the church fathers became the institutional basis for the separation of am and church. The label was filled with anti-Torah content: "we are Christians, therefore we are not Israel." That is the mechanism behind replacement theology — and it begins with a foreign word that was never an internal term. Populist-theological · post-canonical redefinition
Your Passport has Changed
When the am concept moves from head to heart, your self-understanding changes fundamentally. You are no longer a Western Christian who sympathizes with Israel as an interesting faith tradition. Through the blood of Yeshua you have been incorporated into the covenant people — a fellow citizen, a member of the household of the Father.
Tabernacle Projection — The People as Sanctuary
If the am is a place in the Tabernacle, it is the entire community surrounding the sanctuary — the twelve tribes camping in a perfect arrangement around the Tabernacle, each on its own side of the compass points (Numbers 2). The Tabernacle stands in the center; the people surround it. This is the ecclesiology of Scripture: the sanctuary does not stand in the church — the am surrounds and carries the presence of YHWH. The community is the bearer of the Presence.
Ephesians 2:21–22 directly connects this to the am reality of the Renewed Covenant: "In him the whole structure, being joined together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord; in him you also are being built together into a dwelling place for God by the Spirit." The am is the living temple — the community that together bears the presence of YHWH.
- The distinction between am (covenant family) and goy (political nation) is decisive. In which category did you live before you discovered the am concept? What has changed in how you see yourself?
- The gematria of am (110) contains the ayin of sod — the intimate counsel. Has your participation in the am brought you closer to the inner counsel of the Father? How?
- In the olive tree diagram you see Judah (remained near but not recognizing Yeshua), Ephraim (scattered among the nations), wild branches (grafted), and broken-off branches. Where were you — and where are you now?
- Ruth said: "Your people shall be my people" — without theology, from love. Can you speak that sentence? And how does it sound when you truly mean it?
- Yeshua recapitulates Israel's history: Egypt, wilderness, testing. How does this change your image of Yeshua when you see Him not only as "Savior" but as "true Israel"?
- Matthew 1:21 says He will save His am. You are part of that am. How does it sound to hear that His mission was also directed toward you — not as an individual but as a member of the covenant family?
- Romans 11:18 — "You do not support the root, but the root supports you." Have you ever been tempted as a wild branch to look down on the original noble branches? How does this verse correct you?
- How would you explain to someone that believers are not a new people but are grafted into the existing covenant people? Which metaphor or Bible passage would you use?
- If the exodus from Egypt is your liberation and Sinai your covenant — how do you celebrate Pesach? How do you live the moadim? Are the feasts of YHWH for you feast days or historical curiosities?
- What concrete compassion do you feel toward the Jewish people — the Judah branch — who does not yet recognize the Melech? And what compassion do you feel toward traditional Christians — the wild branches who do not yet know their grafting?
- What is the am? How do you explain to someone who grew up with "God has placed the church in the place of Israel" that this is a translation choice, not a canonical conclusion?
- If you were to speak the Ruth-sentence to someone who doubts whether to make the crossing — what do you say? What fruit of your own am-walk do you share as an invitation?
Sod — The Hidden Layer: Ezekiel 37 describes the reunion of the two sticks with an unexpected image: the two sticks become one in the hand of the prophet — while people watch. "And when your people say to you, 'Will you not tell us what you mean by these?' say to them..." (verse 18) The reunion of Am Yisrael is a testimony-act — visible to those who look, explainable by those who understand. You are that prophet. Your walk as a grafted wild branch who consciously chooses the culture of the am — the Sabbath, the feasts, the Torah guidelines — is the two-sticks-act in the sight of those who ask about it. The testimony is the fruit of the study. And the study leads to the walk that makes people ask: "What do you mean by that?" Then you tell them of the noble olive tree, of Ruth, of the two houses — and of the Melech who is returning to restore His am.