Chosen or Accountable? Rethinking the Israelites’ Calling

The idea of a “chosen people” is one of the most powerful and most misunderstood concepts in religious history. To many, it suggests divine preference, privilege, or even superiority. But scripture tells a far more demanding story. From the beginning, chosenness was never a conclusion, it was an assignment. It was not a badge of honour, but a burden of responsibility. The story of the Israelites does not end with the claim, “we are chosen.” It reaches its true meaning in a far more challenging command: “you shall be a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.” That is the covenant. That is the calling.

Chosen for Responsibility, Not Privilege

After their dramatic deliverance from Egypt, the Israelites stand at Mount Sinai and enter into a covenant with God. The terms are clear and conditional: “If you obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my treasured possession… and you shall be to me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.” (Exodus 19:5–6). The structure is unmistakable: if - then. Divine favour is tied to human responsibility. More importantly, the identity they are given -- a kingdom of priests --- redefines chosenness itself. A priest serves. A priest sacrifices. A priest stands between God and humanity. To be a kingdom of priests is not to dominate others, but to serve them. Holiness, therefore, is not abstract. It is practical: justice in trade, fairness in judgment, care for the poor, honesty, discipline, and compassion. To be chosen is to live differently. To reflect divine character in everyday life.

A Pattern Across Scripture
This link between privilege and responsibility runs throughout both the Bible and the Qur’an. The Qur’an acknowledges the special status of the Children of Israel, but immediately ties it to accountability: “Remember My favor… and fulfill My covenant, and I will fulfill your covenant.” (Qur’an 2:40–47). Yet history shows that witnessing miracles is not the same as living in obedience. When commanded to enter the Promised Land, fear overtook faith: “Indeed within it is a people of great strength…” (Qur’an 5:22). The result? A generation lost its opportunity. The lesson is timeless: privilege does not remove responsibility. If anything, it increases it.

What the Scholars Teach Us
Great thinkers across traditions have echoed this same truth. Maimonides argued that divine law exists to shape moral excellence, not to elevate one people above others. Jonathan Sacks captured it simply: “To be chosen is not to be better than others. It is to be summoned to serve.” Augustine of Hippo warned against turning divine favour into entitlement, while John Calvin insisted that true election is proven through conduct, not claims. And Søren Kierkegaard reminds us that truth is only real when it is lived.

A Dangerous Misunderstanding
What emerges from all these sources is a sobering insight. The language of chosenness becomes dangerous when detached from its ethical demands. When people remember only that they are “chosen,” but forget that they are called to be “a kingdom of priests,” religion can easily become a tool of self-congratulation. This is not just an ancient problem. It is a recurring human tendency. Communities of faith, across time and place, including here in Africa, often struggle with the temptation to claim identity without embracing responsibility. It is easier to inherit a sacred title than to live a sacred life. Today, this tension is visible everywhere. Religious identity is sometimes used to justify superiority, exclusion, or even political power. But the scriptures themselves resist this misuse. They redirect us away from privilege and back to purpose. Divine favour is not a reward for greatness. It is a trust to be honoured.

A Call Back to Sinai
To recover the true meaning of chosenness, we must return to Sinai. That vision demands humility. It insists on ethical consistency. And it calls for service. Not domination, not entitlement, but service.

The phrase “a kingdom of priests” still confronts us today:

The story of the Israelites stands as both inspiration and warning. It shows what is possible when people align with divine purpose, and what happens when they do not. History, miracles, and identity are not enough. What matters is the response.

My Thoughts: The Burden of Being Chosen

Chosenness is not an endpoint. It is a beginning. It does not say, “You are better.”
It says, “You are accountable.” It does not grant permission to dominate.
It demands a commitment to uplift. And so, the covenant does not end with the words “you are a chosen people.” It reaches its true meaning in the far more demanding charge: “You shall be a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.” That is the burden, and the enduring dignity of the Israelites.

Columnist’s Note:
Israelites or Israelis --- Why the Distinction Matters: This article refers to Israelites, not Israelis, and the difference is important.

Using “Israelis” in this discussion would shift the focus into modern politics and obscure the central message that chosenness in scripture is about responsibility, not entitlement.

FUSEINI ABDULAI BRAIMAH
+233208282575 / +233550558008
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Ghanaian essayist and information provider whose writings weave research, history and lived experience into thought-provoking commentary.

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

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