Showing posts with label Current Events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Current Events. Show all posts

Friday, August 27, 2021

Yeshua, the True King

So far, I have avoided posting about the elephant in the room.

I'm talking about the 'Rona.

I've been watching, praying, and taking it all in, ever since Covid 19 disrupted the planet over a year and a half ago.

Has there ever been anything that has affected the whole world in this way, in such a short time?  In my opinion, even World War 2 did not affect the world with such suddenness and entirety. This virus literally shut down the planet almost overnight.

For a long time, I have been pondering a connection between Covid and the white horse of Revelation 6:  And I looked, and behold, a white horse!  And its rider had a bow, and a crown was given to him, and he came out conquering, and to conquer.

The word that was standing out to me was crown.  The Greek word is stephanos, but the Latin word in the vulgate (scriptures translated into Latin by Jerome in the year 405 AD) is corona.

As I meditated on the possible connection, I sensed a strong whisper in my spirit from the Lord, "Corona is not king, I am."  This whisper occurred in the spring of 2020, in the early days of lockdown.

This whispered truth has been my constant reminder of Who is in charge. It is a reminder to bow down to Him only, and not to the virus and all its, um, stuff.

Anyway, back to the white horse.  Most scholars agree that the white horse here in chapter 6 is a picture of deception.  Revelation 19:11 depicts our TRUE King seated on a white horse when He returns to conquer His enemies, and in that passage He is called Faithful and True.  

White is the color of purity and also of victory.  It is interesting to note that in ancient times, Roman Generals entered their conquered cities in chariots drawn by white horses.

Our enemy the devil is the Father of Lies and can only mimic and deceive.  So it is no surprise that scripture portrays his deception by the use of a white horse.  And he is going to try and conquer, but he will get only so far.

Wisdom is needed, saints.

If we look back to 2 Thessalonians 2, the context is the Day of the Lord, and the return of our King.  Verse 3 warns believers not to be deceived: Let no one deceive you in any way.  For that day will not come, unless the rebellion comes first, and the man of lawlessness is revealed, the son of destruction.

Further on in the chapter, we are told about the great deception that will take place on earth: The coming of the lawless one is by the activity of Satan with all power and false signs and wonders,  and with all wicked deception for those who are perishing, because they refused to love the truth and so be saved. Therefore God sends them a strong delusion, so that they may believe what is false, in order that all may be condemned who did not believe the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness.

Dang.  So much of this seems to be taking place right under our noses. 

Ok, let's go back to our white horse in Revelation 6, so that I can geek out with more original language stuff.

What is this bow that the rider is holding? The Greek word is toxon.  I will let Wikipedia define the origin of the word toxon:  

The modern terms "toxic" and "toxin" derive from the ancient Greek word for "bow", toxon, from Old Persian *taxa-, "an arrow". ... In the Kingdom of Kush, arrows were often poison-tipped. There is some indication that poisoned arrows were used in battle against the Romans from 27 BC to 22 BC.

Chew on that idea for awhile.  Is there a modern (or moderna) equivalent of something that will stab us and contains poison?  I'm not going to be dogmatic about this, but it is definitely worth considering.  Is there a current worldwide campaign to convince us to take a poisonous skin prick? Are people with dissenting opinions silenced?  I think the answer is obvious.


There is one more biblical word I want to geek out on.  It is found in Galatians 5:20, Revelation 9:21, and Revelation 18:23.  The Greek word is pharmakeia, and the ESV translates the word as sorceries.  But let's look at the outline of Biblical usage as found in Blue Letter Bible:


Let those definitions sink in.  And then I urge you to pray,  seek the Lord, and ask for wisdom in all these matters. 

Because He is the King, He is in charge, and He is coming soon... on a white horse.


I want to end this post on a high note, so let's look at Psalm 45. It is easy to see the coming King and Kingdom in this beautiful psalm:

For the director of music. To the tune of “Lilies.” Of the Sons of Korah. A maskil. A wedding song.
(A WEDDING song!  Did you catch that?  Our bridegroom is coming soon!)

My heart is stirred by a noble theme
as I recite my verses for the king;
my tongue is the pen of a skillful writer.

You are the most excellent of men
and your lips have been anointed with grace,
since God has blessed you forever.

Gird your sword on your side, you mighty one;
clothe yourself with splendor and majesty.

In your majesty ride forth victoriously (on a white horse?)
in the cause of truth, humility and justice;
let your right hand achieve awesome deeds.

Let your sharp arrows pierce the hearts of the king’s enemies;  
(the arrows of the TRUE king)
let the nations fall beneath your feet.

Your throne, O God, will last for ever and ever;
a scepter of justice will be the scepter of your kingdom.

You love righteousness and hate wickedness;
therefore God, your God, has set you above your companions
by anointing you with the oil of joy.

All your robes are fragrant with myrrh and aloes and cassia;
from palaces adorned with ivory
the music of the strings makes you glad.

Daughters of kings are among your honored women;
at your right hand is the royal bride in gold of Ophir.

Listen, daughter, and pay careful attention:
Forget your people and your father’s house.

Let the king be enthralled by your beauty;
honor him, for he is your lord.

The city of Tyre will come with a gift,
people of wealth will seek your favor.

All glorious is the princess within her chamber;
her gown is interwoven with gold.

In embroidered garments she is led to the king;
her virgin companions follow her—
those brought to be with her.

Led in with joy and gladness,
they enter the palace of the king.

Your sons will take the place of your fathers;
you will make them princes throughout the land.

I will perpetuate your memory through all generations;
therefore the nations will praise you for ever and ever.

And since I want to end on a high note, I will look at the next three horses in a future post...




Saturday, December 21, 2019

Deep Theological Thoughts on Resurrection

It has been an interesting week in Christendom.

In case you know nothing about what has been going on, this is what I am referring to:

About a week ago, a precious two-year-old little girl named Olive tragically died.  Her parents are worship leaders at Bethel Church in Redding, CA.  The child’s death triggered a six-day campaign to bring her back to life again. 

Young Olive was not on life support; she was in the morgue.  That is where she remained, while for six days, Christians all over the world participated in the plea for her resurrection.  They did this in many ways:  through fervent prayer, praise and worship, commanding her to “come home,"  declaring/commanding that her life return to her, foot-stomping, claiming that not all deaths are in God’s timing, and trying to raise $100,000 on Go Fund Me. 

I am not sure if they raised the full amount, but many of their actions did raise quite a few eyebrows.

After a week of this “pressing in,” as many would call it, Olive’s parents and the Bethel congregation conceded that she was not going to be raised from the dead, and they have now gone on to bury their precious child. I weep for them.

This has really hit home for me.  Several weeks ago, my beloved unborn grandson died in the womb of his mother, eight days before his due date.  I was heartbroken, but I enlisted the help of some friends to pray that God would raise this sweet baby back to life before he was born.  But alas, it was not to be; my beautiful grandson was born into this world and never took a breath this side of eternity.  I mourn deeply for him; and yet, I have the hope and expectation that someday he will live again.

With all this going on, I just want to try and collect all my theological thoughts here.  I am not saying that my theology is completely correct (indeed, I don’t believe anyone on the planet has 100% correct theology), but I just want to put my thoughts into writing.

There are those who would say we just didn’t have enough faith.  This is an oft-repeated statement within the Word of Faith movement, and one that I don’t agree with.  What a burden to place on someone who is grieving a loss!  In Mark 9:24, we see a father struggling with his own belief:  “Lord, I DO believe; HELP me in my unbelief!”  Yeshua went on to answer this father’s prayer for his son.

There are others who believe that our lives today should look exactly like the lives of the apostles in Acts, who were the first ones to bring the gospel to this world.  Is this true?

In Mark 16, Yeshua is giving the great commission, and speaking of the signs and wonders that will accompany those who believe.  The passage wraps up with “and they went out and preached everywhere, while the Lord worked with them and confirmed the message by accompanying signs.

Why did Yeshua Himeslf do miracles?  It was to prove that He was who He said He was.  Why do these signs and wonders accompany the believers who are delivering the good news?  To prove that the gospel is true.

I believe these miraculous gifts DID disappear, for the most part, from the church during the dark and middle ages when corruption was widespread and the gospel was not being preached to the world at large.  (When I was saved, it was through a congregation that was cessationist in its belief - in other words, the belief that the miraculous gifts of the Spirit are not for today.  But I changed my view eventually, through Bible study and seeing the hand of God move in many ways).

But ever since the advent of the great missionary movement,which began around the end of the 18th century, signs and wonders have been appearing again in the places where the gospel had never been preached before.  Today, I often read about the things that are happening in places such as China, India, North Korea, Iran… not to mention the dreams and visions that are taking place all over the Middle East. 

This is not to say that God does not perform miracles today among nations and people who are well-established in faith.  He does, according to His will and His purposes.  Several years ago, He healed me miraculously of a lung condition that I’d been suffering from for years, and I praise Him for that.

CAN God raise the dead?  Of course He can. The last time I checked, God was still in charge of the universe.

However,  He gave us His book so that we could study it. Whenever someone was raised from the dead in scripture, it happened at the time of the asking.  Yeshua waited four days to visit the bereaved family of Lazarus, but the moment He called Lazurus forth from the grave, the resurrection happened.  Elijah stretched himself out over the widow’s son three times, and then promptly the young man came back to life.  When Eutychus fell out of the three-story window and died in Acts 20, he was brought back to life immediately. (I’ve heard it humorously said that Eutychus was just trying to avoid greeting time at church 😂😂 But I digress...)

The only place in scripture I have seen the pleading, frantic dancing, foot-stomping, on-and-on demanding of a miracle was the prophets of Baal in the showdown with Elijah.

Let me be clear; I am NOT claiming that the people of Bethel were worshiping Baal.  I believe their faith in the One True God is real.  We Christians need to be careful about writing off folks whose doctrinal understanding is different from our own.  It is not our theology or doctrine that saves us; it is faith and trust in the atoning sacrifice of Yeshua, the Lamb of God/Son of God on the cross that redeems us unto eternal life.

But I believe that staying rooted and grounded in the Word of God is absolutely essential.  And not only that, but it is also important to rely on the whole counsel of scripture and not simply rely on proof texts:  out-of-context verses that seem to prove our point.

Here is an example.  John 14:12 says, “Truly, truly, I say to you, whoever believes in me will also do the works that I do, and greater than these will he do, because I am going to the Father.

That is a verse I heard quoted quite a few times this past week, and I had heard it quoted in charismatic circles so often that I had already studied the verse for myself.  In my spirit, I was disturbed by the idea that anything we could do would be greater than the One that spoke the universe into existence, and then gave His own life as an offering of redemption for all of humanity.

The keyword here is the English word greater (megas in Greek).  It can be defined as farther-reaching in scope.  Yeshua never left the Middle East while on earth, but His followers have taken the good news ALL OVER THE WORLD – therefore having a much greater scope.  To imagine the word greater meant that we would perform bigger and better works than those done by the King of Kings and Lord of Lords is mind boggling to me. 

The verse wraps up with Yeshua saying because I am going to the Father, which to me clearly demonstrates the meaning of greater as being more far-reaching.  These Israeli believers were commissioned by the Messiah take the good news to the rest of the planet.  Today, this job is nearly complete.  I wonder if those early believers ever imagined it would take 2000 years?

Meanwhile, may baby Olive and my baby grandson rest in peace until Yeshua returns and resurrects us to immortal life.  And I pray that Christians will base their faith on our Messiah and His word, and not to let the actions or doctrines of other Christians sway them away from that faith.

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Kiss the Son

As I prepare for another trip to the land of Israel, Psalm 2 keeps running through my mind.

It begins like this.

Why do the nations rage, and the people plot a vain thing?
The kings of the earth set themselves,
And the rulers take counsel together,
Against the Lord and against His Anointed, (Messiah) saying,
“Let us break Their bonds in pieces
And cast away Their cords from us.”
We surely see this being fulfilled in the world today.  One place in particular that stands out in my mind is the Dome of the Rock, which sits on or near the site of the Temple Mount, where the Temple of Yehovah once (actually, twice) stood.

Built in the early days of Islam, it is an impressive structure.  I have been right up to its tiled walls, but I was shooed away by an Arab man, because only Muslims are now allowed inside.  On close examination, one can see Arabic writing on the tiles along the top perimeter of the structure.



What most people don't know is what it says.  Does it praise Allah, the god of Islam?  No.  This is what it says:  "Jesus, son of Mary was only a messenger of Allah.  Allah has no son.  It is blasphemy to say he has taken a son."

Psalm 2 continues.  

He who sits in the heavens shall laugh;
The Lord shall hold them in derision.
Then He shall speak to them in His wrath,
And distress them in His deep displeasure:

 “Yet I have set My King
On My holy hill of Zion.”

 “I will declare the decree:
The Lord has said to Me,
‘You are My Son,

Today I have begotten You.

 Ask of Me, and I will give You
The nations for Your inheritance,
And the ends of the earth for Your possession.
You shall break them with a rod of iron;
You shall dash them to pieces like a potter’s vessel.’”

Today, as you walk about the Temple Mount plaza (if you is able to get up there in the first place), one can hear the chanting refrains of the Muslim women who are paid to yell "Allahu akbar" over and over again during visiting hours.  It does not just mean allah is great.  It means allah is greater.  They are trying to proclaim that their god is greater than the One True God.  Methinks they protesteth too much.

So what are we to do about this Son, spoken of in Psalm 2?

The psalm continues.  It tells us exactly what to do:

Now therefore, be wise, O kings;
Be instructed, you judges of the earth.
Serve the Lord with fear,
And rejoice with trembling.
Kiss the Son, lest He be angry,
And you perish in the way,
When His wrath is kindled but a little.
Blessed are all those who put their trust in Him.


Without the Son, you perish.  With the Son, you are blessed.  Trust in the Son!  

Even Islam can't help but focus on the Son.


Monday, October 27, 2014

Exposing Christian Palestinianism

Today's blog post is a re-post from Richard Mather's blog, Defense of the Israeli people.  It is very well-written and clearly explains the doctrine and history of "Christian Palestinianism."

In case you were wondering, I do NOT agree with Christian Palestinianism as set forth in this article.  I believe in the dignity and value of every human being, but I also firmly believe the Biblical promise of the Land that was given to Abraham in Genesis chapters 12, 15, and 17 as an everlasting covenant; and lest there be any confusion, God confirmed the covenant with Isaac in Genesis 26:3 and then with Jacob in Genesis 28.






EXPOSING CHRISTIAN PALESTINIANISM



“We have been taught for centuries that the Jews are the Chosen People. We do not believe anymore that they are the Chosen People of God, since now we have a new understanding of that Choseness.” (Father Elias Chacour, Catholic Archbishop of Israel)

What is Christian Palestinianism?
Christian Palestinianism is a phrase coined by Paul Wilkinson, an evangelical author based in Manchester, England. Wilkinson defines Christian Palestinianism as “an inverted mirror image of Christian Zionism,” and describes it as “diametrically opposed to that of biblical Christian Zionism, and whose opposition to Israel and her Christian allies is expressed in their outspoken support of the Palestinian agenda.”


The term Palestinianism, however, seems to have originated in the writings of Jewish Egyptian author Bat Ye’or. In Eurabia: the Euro-Arab Axis, she outlines the growing phenomenon of Palestinian replacement theology and the gradual Islamisation of Christianity. Christian Palestinianists, according to Ye’or interpret the Bible from the viewpoint of the Quran and “do not admit to any historical or theological link between the biblical Israel, the Jewish people and the modern State of Israel.”

Chrislam uniting against Israel

Christian Palestinianists and their supporters in the West recognize the political benefit of undermining the State of Israel’s biblical foundations. This is achieved by stripping the Bible of its Jewishness, neutralizing the prophetic significance of the Land of Israel and recasting Jesus as a Palestinian. This is despite the fact that Jesus was a Galilean Jew and the “Palestine” didn’t exist as a political or national entity during his lifetime.


Wilkinson places the birth of Christian Palestinianism at the end of the 1980s. However, the groundwork had already been laid in 1967 by an Arab-Christian memorandum entitled “What is Required of the Christian Faith Concerning the Palestine Problem.” The document, which had the blessing of Catholic and Orthodox clergy, declared that it is “a total misunderstanding of the story of salvation and a perversion of God’s plan for a Christian to want to re-establish a Jewish nation as a political entity.”

In one of its most audacious passages, the memorandum reads: “The Christian conscience should always discern what is the authentic vocation of the Jewish people and what is the other side of the coin, that is, the racist State of Israel.” In fact, the memorandum calls for a permanent exile of the Jews on the grounds that “the Jewish race was chosen to serve the salvation of Humanity and not to establish itself in any particular religious or racial way.”

Pope Francis with Muslims at the Dome of the Rock, May 2014

The theological underpinning of Christian Palestinianism is a rebranded version of replacement theology. Fulfilment theology is based on the premise that the life, death and resurrection of Jesus was a spiritual fulfilment of God’s promise to return the Jews to Israel. Therefore the Jews – and by extension the Land of Israel – have no prophetic meaning and have fulfilled their roles in salvation history. The theologian N.T. Wright, for example, argues that Israel’s restoration was achieved through the resurrection and that Jewish ethnic identity is no longer important on a religious level. The Land of Israel, Jerusalem and Temple are all obsolete, according to Wright, because Jesus embodies all three.

Although keen to neutralise the prophetic significance of the Bible for Jews, Christian Palestinianists have no problem with appropriating the tradition for themselves. In 2005, the Anglican bishop of Jerusalem, Riah Abu el-Assal, claimed of Palestinian Christians: “We are the true Israel […] no-one can deny me the right to inherit the promises, and after all the promises were first given to Abraham and Abraham is never spoken of in the Bible as a Jew.”

In 1997, the Palestinian Authority aired a program that claimed the stories in the Torah took place in Yemen, not in Israel. The PA also says there is no evidence that the Western Wall has anything to do with Second Temple.

Christian Palestinianists question or even condemn passages in the Bible that elevate Israel above other nations. In fact, the prime mover of the Christian Palestinianist movement, Naim Ateek, who is the Anglican canon of St. George’s Cathedral in Jerusalem , has stated that some Bible passages are explicitly “exclusivist.” There is a “great need to ‘de-Zionize’ these texts,” he believes.

In 1989, Ateek published the founding document of Christian Palestinianism, Justice and Only Justice: A Palestinian Theology of Liberation, which drew much of its strength from South American liberation theology. Five years later, Ateek founded an organization called Sabeel – the Palestinian Ecumenical Liberation Theology Center. Sabeel means “the way,” which is a clear reference to both Jesus as “the way,” and the early name of the Christians, who were called “followers of the way.”

The version of liberation theology espoused by Ateek is that of Jesus as “a Palestinian living under an occupation.” In his 2001 Easter message, Ateek spoke of Jesus as “the powerless Palestinian humiliated at a checkpoint.” Apart from the fact that Jesus wasn’t a Palestinian, this is harmless enough. But Ateek then steps up the rhetoric, with disturbing anti-Semitic undertones:
“In this season of Lent, it seems to many of us that Jesus is on the cross again with thousands of crucified Palestinians around him. It only takes people of insight to see the hundreds of thousands of crosses throughout the land, Palestinian men, women, and children being crucified. Palestine has become one huge Golgotha. The Israeli government crucifixion system is operating daily. Palestine has become the place of the skull.”

This is shocking and inflammatory on a number of levels. The Palestinians are indeed restricted in their movements because of the terror threat, but being held up at a checkpoint is hardly a crucifixion. The reference to “hundreds of thousands of crosses throughout the land” is obviously figurative but the image is overblown and patently absurd. If any place on earth should be dubbed Golgotha, surely it should be Auschwitz or Treblinka, not the West Bank. The reference to the “Israeli government crucifixion system” is outrageous and quite anti-Semitic, given the old canard about Jews being responsible for the death of Jesus.

The Kairos Palestine Document
Perhaps the Christian Palestinianist movement found its ultimate expression in the Kairos Palestine Document. Published in 2009 and subtitled “A moment of truth: A word of faith, hope and love from the heart of Palestinian suffering,” the paper was a rehash of the 1967 Arab-Christian memorandum.
Notably, the Kairos document (which can be found on the World Council of Churches website) speaks on behalf of Christian and Muslim Palestinians, who apparently share a “deeply rooted” history and a “natural right” to the land. In contrast, Israel is an alien entity, and only exists because of Western guilt over the Holocaust. Not surprisingly, the document makes no mention of Muslim involvement in the Holocaust, nor does it comment on the decades of Jewish immigration in the decades before Hitler’s genocide.

The Holocaust aside, the State of Israel is associated with the words “evil” and “sin.” According to the text, the “occupation” is an affront to both humanity and the divine, and “distorts the image of God in the Israeli who has become an occupier.”

The document criticizes Christian Zionism as being “far from Christian teachings” and praises the first intifada, referring to it as a “peaceful struggle.” Terrorism, while not sanctioned, is excused on the grounds that Israel is ultimately responsible for Palestinian acts of violence against Jewish civilians.

And if any proof is needed that conformity is in fashion, the document calls for economic sanctions against Israel: “Palestinian civil organizations, as well as international organizations, NGOs and certain religious institutions call on individuals, companies and states to engage in divestment and in an economic and commercial boycott of everything produced by the occupation.”

This, according to the writers of the text, is an example of non-violent protest, despite the fact that there is nothing praiseworthy about ruining Jewish businesses and putting Palestinians out of work.

Christian Palestinianism in the West
Since the turn of the century, Christian Palestinianism has been warmly embraced by various Christian groups in the West, notably Anglicans, Presbyterians, evangelicals and left-wing protestants, such as the Quakers. Apart from attacking Israel, westernized Christian Palestinianists have gone to great lengths to ridicule and invalidate Christian Zionism.

In 2004, the General Synod of the Reformed Church in America declared Christian Zionism to be an “extreme form of dispensationalism,” a “distortion of the biblical message,” and an impediment to a “just peace in Israel/Palestine.” In 2007, the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland accused Christian Zionism of portraying “an unjust God, with an unjust people.”

Many of the books attacking Christian Zionists accuse the latter of advocating “Armageddon” rather than justice. As well as removing the prophetic significance of the scriptures, books such as Anglican vicar Reverend Dr Stephen Sizer’s Christian Zionism: Road-map to Armageddon?misrepresent and deride centuries of mainstream protestant tradition.

Sizer, a virulent opponent of Israel, believes there is a sharp distinction between God’s covenant with Israel and the beliefs of Jesus’s disciples. “There is,” he says, “no evidence that the apostles believed that the Jewish people still had a divine right to the land, or that Jewish possession of the land would be important, let alone that Jerusalem would remain a central aspect of God’s purposes for the world.” Sizer adds: Jerusalem and the Land of Israel “have been made irrelevant to God’s redemptive purposes.”

Sizer is a regular contributor to Islamic media outlets, including Iran’s Press TV. He has been photographed with Arafat, and with Zahra Mostafavi Khomeini, the daughter of the Ayatollah. He has met with – and publicly defended – Raed Salah, a Hamas fundraiser who accuses the Jews of making Passover bread with the blood of Christian children. (There are numerous photos of Sizer and Salah enjoying each other’s company.)
photo-298x1671
Steven Sizer with Yasser Arafat

Sizer seems unembarrassed by the fact that his own remarks and writings stray into anti-Semitic territory. For instance, he once stated that the reason Jews “were expelled from the land was that they were more interested in money and power and treated the poor and aliens with contempt.” In 2011, he posted a link on his Facebook page to an anti-Semitic website called “The Ugly Truth,” and in the same year, he went to Malaysia to work with Viva Palestina, whose leading activists include Holocaust-denier Matthias Chang.

Another Anglican notable, Desmond Tutu, has likened Zionism to racism and repeatedly referred to Israel as an “apartheid” state. He is also a supporter of boycotts. Tutu, a friend of Yasser Arafat and Hamas’s Ismail Haniyeh, accepted the role as patron of Sabeel International in 2003. This is the same Sabeel that is spearheading the Christian Palestinianist movement in the Middle East. It is perhaps no surprise that US attorney Alan Dershowitz has called Tutu a “racist and a bigot.”

The number of Christian organizations censuring the Jewish state is increasing. It is common for left-wing Christians to exonerate the Palestinians of any historical and contemporary accountability, thereby holding Israel solely responsible for ending the crisis. In 2009, the Central Committee of the World Council of Churches released a statement condemning the so-called Israeli occupation and encouraging a boycott of goods made in settlements. Significantly, the World Council of Churches is also calling for the internationalization of Jerusalem.

Meanwhile, Christian Aid and the Quakers are calling on the UK government to implement a total ban of settlement goods. In North America, the United Church of Canada is heading towards an official boycott policy. And the Church of England, which has a large overseas membership, is considering whether it should adopt the World Council of Churches’ Ecumenical Accompaniers Programme in Palestine and Israel. The EAPPI is blatantly pro-Palestinian and holds the Jewish state solely responsible for resolving the situation in the West Bank.

A religion of resentment 
Christian Palestinianism is a religion of resentment. It is a projection of a sense of inferiority onto an external scapegoat. Thwarted by failure, Christian Palestinianists blame their problems on “the Jews.” The God of Israel is declared dead, only to be replaced by the anti-Semitic God of Palestine.

Propoganda portraying Yeshua as "Palestinian"

Of all the anti-Israel discourses that exist today, Christian Palestinianism is perhaps one of the most shocking. Shocking because it wants to de-Judaize the Bible and undermine Jewish identity. Shocking because it also revives the notion of Jews as killers of Christ. Moreover, the post-Holocaust reconciliation of Jews and Christians is lethally undermined. The work of Geza Vermes, and others like him, who have examined in close detail the Jewishness of Jesus, is being cast aside in favour of a quasi-gnostic Jesus.

On a theological level, Christian Palestinianism is entirely self-defeating. If God no longer honours his covenant with the Jews and the Land of Israel, then the whole foundation of Christianity collapses. A God who changes his mind about the Jews is no longer the God of Abraham, Moses or Jesus. Palestinianism is not only un-Biblical, it is un-Christian.

Pro-Palestinian Christians in the West need to take a long, hard look at themselves and ask whether it is ethical to be consorting with liars, terrorists and anti-Semites. They should also ask themselves if their actions are likely to lead to a fresh outburst of religiously-motivated anti-Semitism. The trouble is, history shows that many Christians need no excuse to persecute the Jews. There seems to be an in-built tendency to raise their fists against the descendants of Isaac and Jacob. This is bad news not only for the State of Israel and the Jewish diaspora, but also for Christianity itself, which will not survive another destructive wave of anti-Semitism.

As it says in Ezekiel 35, “Because you harbored an ancient hostility and delivered the Israelites over to the sword at the time of their calamity, the time their punishment reached its climax, therefore as surely as I live, declares the Sovereign Lord, I will give you over to bloodshed and it will pursue you. Since you did not hate bloodshed, bloodshed will pursue you.”


Thursday, October 23, 2014

Blood Moons

We are in the midst of a tetrad of blood moons - four total lunar eclipses that coincide with four Biblical Holy Days in a row.  Passover 2014, Sukkot 2014, Passover 2015, and Sukkot 2015.  For more on the odds of this happening, see the highlighted blue print at end of this post.  For now, let's just say the odds are beyond tiny.

The Word of God says right in Genesis 1:14 that God put the sun, moon, and stars in the sky for several reasons.  They are for signs, seasons, days, years, and to provide a night light for us. 

Days, years, and night lights are pretty straightforward.  But what about the others?

The Hebrew word for sign is ot, which means a sign, a signal, a remembrance, a warning, an omen.

The Hebrew word for season is mo'ed, which means appointed time, or appointed meeting.

The Bible speaks of the moon turning to blood (total lunar eclipse) several times.  Joel 2:31 tells us The sun shall be turned into darkness, And the moon into blood, before the coming of the great and awesome day of the Lord.  This passage is quoted in Acts 2:20.  The theme of signs in the heavens before the Lord's return continues in Revelation 6:12, Matthew 24:29, Mark 13:24, and Luke 21:25.  

Something's up.



I had the privilege of being in Israel last summer for Shavuot (Pentecost for you Greek speakers), which was seven weeks after the first blood moon of the tetrad.  Five days after my return home, three Israeli teens were kidnapped and murdered near the ancient Biblical town of Hebron.  

This tragic event led directly to the Gaza War - Operation Protective Edge - during which the IDF discovered many terror tunnels leading into Israel.  It was also discovered that Hamas intended to use these tunnels for a massive terror attack on the first fall Biblical feast of Yom Teruah (aka Rosh Hashanah). The soldiers found IDF uniforms, ropes, syringes, and other items that were to be used to take Israeli hostages.  The IDF destroyed the tunnels, the war ended after 50 days, and the planned terrorist attack of Rosh Hashanah was averted.

In the meantime, the evil entity of ISIS arose, seemingly of of nowhere.  I won't elaborate on their "activities," because if you don't know, you are quite possibly living under a rock.



The second of the four blood moons just happened a couple weeks ago, as Sukkot was beginning.  Since then, the Silent Intifada (uprising) by Arabs has begun.  Just yesterday, a terrorist who was previously imprisoned for his terrorist activities, rammed his car into people at a light rail stop in Jerusalem, killing three-month-old Chaya Brown.

Chaya Zisel Brown, just hours before her murder
As tragic as the murders of this precious girl and the three teens near Hebron are, occurrences like these serve to unite the people of Israel like nothing else.  The three teens did not die in vain; because of their murders, a massive terror attack was averted.  It remains to be seen how this little girl's tragedy will change the course of history.

So what comes next?  

Scripture does not tell us exactly what to expect with each blood moon.  We are to be ready and watchful, knowing that the Messiah will be coming soon. 



Elaboration on Lunar Tetrads

NASA says there will be 12,064 lunar eclipses between -1999 BC and +3000 AD. 

Of these 12,064 lunar eclipses, 3,479 will be total lunar eclipses.  That’s an average of less than one total lunar eclipse per year.   It is an average of 2.5 lunar eclipses per year of "total plus partial" lunar eclipses.

During that time there will be 142 Lunar Tetrads (four total lunar eclipses in a row, with no intervening partial lunar eclipse).  62 will occur between 1 AD and 2100 AD.  Of the 62, 8 will occur on Biblical Feast Days, so they are called "Biblical Tetrads".  The 8th "Biblical Tetrad" occurs in 2014-2015 and there will not be another "Biblical Tetrad" for almost 600 years.  We are in the time of this tetrad now.

The chances of any lunar eclipse occurring on any particular day, whether total or partial, is less than 3/365.  The chances of one occurring on particular days 4 times in a row would be 3/365 x 3/365 x 3/365 x 3/365 = or about one in 100 x 100 x 100 x 100 = one in 100 million days, or once in 273,000 years.  Nevertheless they have occurred on the first day of Passover and Tabernacles 7 times since 1 AD, and the eighth is in process.  Statistically, they should probably NEVER HAPPEN.

I repeat, something's up, so keep looking up!

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

The Jewish Nakba

This week is the celebration of the 65th birthday of the State of Israel.


If you follow the Middle East conflict at all, you are probably aware that Arabs do not celebrate Israel's Independence Day.  What you will hear about from Arabs instead is the "Nakba" (which is Arabic for catastrophe).  They are referring to the great exodus of Arabs from Israel that took place as the surrounding Arab countries invaded the newborn country with the intention of destroying it.  Many Arabs fled in the face of the invasion, encouraged by their own leadership to do so and being reassured that they could return home after the Jews had been driven into the sea.  Other Arabs were forced out by the Israeli troops who were defending their new country in the face of the attacks.

The numbers are disputed, but it is estimated that over 700,000 Arabs fled the new Jewish homeland and went to the Arab areas of Palestine (mostly West Bank and Gaza), and also to Lebanon, Egypt, and Jordan, among other places.

Today, sixty-five years later, we still hear about Palestinian refugees - people who are the children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren of the original refugees.  For political reasons, they continue to claim refugee status.  No Arab countries will take them in as citizens while they languish in various refugee camps and neighborhoods.

What we do not often hear about today is the 850,000-1,000,000 Jewish people who were forced out of the surrounding Arab countries beginning in 1948.  Many of them had been in their respective countries for over twenty centuries, pre-dating Islam and Christianity.  For example, Iraq had had a significant Jewish population since the Babylonian exile of 586 BC.  It is estimated that in 1948, there were 135,000 Jews in Iraq.  Today, that number is virtually zero.


For a little perspective, here is a list of estimated Jewish populations in some of the other surrounding Arab countries; pre-1948 versus today:
  • Syria and Lebanon:  30,000/Virtually none
  • Egypt:  100,000/Less than 100
  • Libya:  38,000/0
  • Yemen:  63,000/Less than 250
  • Algeria:  140,000/Less than 100
  • Morocco:  265,000/3,000-4,000
  • Tunisia:  105,000/1500
Most of these people were forced to leave because of severe persecution that escalated in 1948.  They left with the clothes on their backs and if lucky, a small suitcase.  It is estimated that the property value that was confiscated or abandoned by these Jewish refugees is $300 billion in today's money.  The land that they vacated is estimated to be almost five times the size of the state of Israel.  The UN provided them with exactly zero dollars in aid, as opposed to the over $50 billion dollars that has been given to the Palestinian Arab refugees and their descendants.

So why don't we hear much about these folks?  Perhaps it is because they refused to cling to the label "refugees."  They didn't foster the victim mentality amongst themselves... they moved on with their lives.

The disturbing thing is that these Muslim countries are now doing the same thing to their Christian populations.  There is a saying in Islam: "First the Saturday people, then the Sunday people."  In other words, first the Jews, and then the Christians.  And that is exactly what we have been seeing.  The Jewish people are virtually gone from these countries, and the persecution of the Christians is heating up. 

The Arabic reads, "On Saturday we kill the Jews, and on Sunday we kill the Christians."
Revelation 12 talks about this.  The woman represents Israel.  In verses 6 and 14, she is led to a place of safety in the wilderness.  Verse 17 speaks of the dragon's frustration, and then his subsequent target:  And the dragon was enraged with the woman, and he went to make war with the rest of her offspring, who keep the commandments of God and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.

First the Jews, and then the Christians.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Election Time Again

The world is filled right now with election rhetoric.  Between commercials, mailings, Facebook posts, and debates (among candidates, family members, friends, and even enemies), I have about had my fill.


I have to say that I am not enthusiastic about any candidate.  I feel like I would be voting for either stage one cancer or stage four cancer.  No, I am not going to spend my energy arguing for the stage one cancer guy, nor will I put his sign in my yard.

What I will do is trust in the sovereignty of God.  Scripture is clear that no government is allowed except by the hand of God, for His purposes.  Here are a few passages to back up that idea:

Daniel 2:20-22
Blessed be the name of God forever and ever, for wisdom and might are His; and He changes the times and the seasons; He removes kings and raises up kings; He gives wisdom to the wise, and knowledge to those who have understanding.

2 Chronicles 20:6
O LORD God of our fathers, are You not God in heaven, and do You not rule over all the kingdoms of the nations, and in Your hand is there not power and might, so that no one is able to withstand You? 

Proverbs 16:4
The Lord has made everything for His own purposes; even the wicked for the day of evil.

Revelation 17:17

For God has put it into their hearts to fulfill His purpose, to be of one mind, and to give their kingdom to the beast, until the words of God are fulfilled.

All leaders, good and evil, lead to the fulfilling of prophecy, God’s ultimate purpose, the coming back of His Son to reign as King of kings. In order to get there, all kinds of things which don’t make sense to us must happen.
 
You may ask, "What about Hitler? Can God have had a purpose with the Holocaust?"  As heinous as that time was, I have to go with scripture and say yes, God did have a purpose.  Don't get me wrong; the Holocaust was gut-wrenching and just thinking of it moves me to tears.  I have to believe that it moved God to tears as well; that it was harder on Him than it was on anyone else.  I think of Yeshua weeping over Jerusalem in Matthew 23:37; oh how He loves His brethren!
 
Without the Holocaust, the State of Israel would not have been born.  It opened up a small window of worldwide sympathy for the Jewish people; a window which soon slammed shut.  And without the State if Israel in existance, Yeshua could not fulfill the scriptures and return to Earth!  Satan is hard at work seeing that this doesn't happen, because he knows it will lead to his demise.
 
So before you get all whipped up about the election, I hope and pray that you will look to the One who is in charge and be assured that He has an ultimate purpose.
 
Nebuchadnezzar was made to live like an animal in a field and eat grass until he realized Who was in charge.  Daniel 5:21 says "Then he was driven from the sons of men, his heart was made like the beasts, and his dwelling was with the wild donkeys. They fed him with grass like oxen, and his body was wet with the dew of heaven, till he knew that the Most High God rules in the kingdom of men, and appoints over it whomever He chooses.

Psalm 118:8-9 tells us, It is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in man. It is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in princes.
Psalm 146:3-4 says, Do not put your trust in princes, nor in a son of man, in whom there is no help. His spirit departs, he returns to his earth; in that very day his plans perish.
So yes, I will vote.  As a citizen of this country, I feel that it is my responsibility.  But I will do so knowing that the results are ultimately in God's hands. 

Thursday, February 16, 2012

For Such a Time As This



The spirit of Haman is alive and well today.  One would have to be pretty sheltered to have not heard how Iran would like to wipe Israel off the face of the map, or how they are currently beefing up their nukes to do just that.

Ironically, the main Haman of today, Amadinijad, lives in the very place of Haman in the book of Esther (In biblical times, Iran was Persia.)

The Feast of Purim begins on Wednesday evening, March 7.  Just as Esther called for a three day fast to intervene for her people, I would like to issue an invitation to people who love Israel to consider doing the same.  Our family (the older ones at least) will begin our three day fast at sundown on March 4, and continue until we break our fast for Purim on the night of the 7th.

So who's in?  Will you stand in the gap for Israel by praying and fasting at this critical time?

And Mordecai told them to answer Esther: “Do not think in your heart that you will escape in the king’s palace any more than all the other Jews.  For if you remain completely silent at this time, relief and deliverance will arise for the Jews from another place, but you and your father’s house will perish. Yet who knows whether you have come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” Then Esther told them to reply to Mordecai:  “Go, gather all the Jews who are present in Shushan, and fast for me; neither eat nor drink for three days, night or day. My maids and I will fast likewise. And so I will go to the king, which is against the law; and if I perish, I perish!”  Esther 4:13-15

 
By the way, those triangles on Haman's (oops, I mean Amadinijad's) ears are called Hamantaschen, which means "Haman's pockets," and are traditionally eaten at Purim.  

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

More Blessings and Curses?

My devotional this morning was from the book of Ezekiel, chapters 25 and 26.  They speak of God's judgment on the countries who dissed Israel.  Listen to these excerpts:

Because you said "Aha!" against My sanctuary when it was profaned, and against the land of Israel when it was desolate...indeed, therefore, I will deliver you as a possession to the men of the East.

Because you clapped your hands, stamped your feet, and rejoiced in heart with all your disdain for the land of Israel, indeed, therefore, I will stretch out My hand against you, and give you as plunder to the nations, I will cut you off from the peoples, and I will cause you to perish from the countries; I will destroy you, and you shall know that I am the Lord.

This is a theme that can be seen again and again throughout scripture.  In His word, God does not tolerate folks who dis Israel.  Genesis and Deuteronomy say, "I will bless those who bless you, and curse those who curse you."

Is this principle still true today?  Look at what happened in Norway.  The news has been full of the horrific tragedy at the camp, yet you don't really hear what the camp was about in the media.  The day before the shooting, the camp of the Labour Party youth were being fed a diet of Israel-hatred.  The camp was visited by Norwegian Foreign Minister on Thursday, and here is a photo of that visit:
"The Palestinians "must have their own state, the occupation must end, the wall must be demolished and it must happen now," said the Foreign Minister to cheers from the audience. 

The shooter is being called anti-Islam by the press, and that is probably true. But do you hear of Norway being called anti-Israel?

What happened in Norway is desperately sad and tragic.  The young people who died had family and friends who loved them, and I in no way would condone such an act against them.  My heart breaks for their parents, who have to endure such a painful loss.

But the tragedy definitly merits a sober examination of the scriptures. God's word doesn't lie.  God is pro-Israel; they are the apple of His eye. (Zech 2:8 - for whoever touches you touches the apple of his eye).  If God is pro-Israel, we should be, too!

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Blessings and Curses

Dear Mr. President,

God's word, talking about Israel, says, "I will bless those who bless you, and curse those who curse you."  Genesis 12:3, Genesis 27:29, Numbers 22:12, Numbers 24:9.

Isaiah 9:16 says, For the leaders of this people cause them to err,  and those who are led by them are destroyed.

I'm just sayin....