The Time to Favor
Zion is Come!
''Thou will arise, and have compassion upon
Zion; for it is time to be gracious unto her, for the appointed time
is come." Psa. 102.14
History recalls the rise and fall of nations and empires as the
tides that ebb and flow. In this ceaseless cycle variations have
occurred only in the manner of appearance and disappearance. Whether
with great and thunderous breakers or with quiet lapping waves the
nations have come and gone. one lone nation arises above history to
lift its head from the depths of ages past to live again. It is
Israel.
Israel's rise and fall may have been similar to that of other
nations in some particulars but in one respect it was without
parallel—God dealt in an exclusive way with them. Not that they
alone proclaimed Him as their God—others may have made such boast,
but the Lord declared Himself to be the God of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob and the God of Israel. (Exod. 3:15; 5:1; Jer. 28:4) To make
this distinction certain the Lord through Amos said, "You only have
I known of all the families of the earth." (Amos 3:2) Such has been
the heritage of Israel.
Rebirth of Israel as a nation is the great phenomenon of our day.
our generation was awed in that great moment of history when men
touched their feet on the moon—it was thrilling to see—but the
rebirth of Israel holds far more significance to those who see this
event as a fulfillment of God's word. The rebirth of Israel could
never have occurred without the astonishing fact that the people of
Israel, who had been scattered throughout the entire earth for
nearly 2,000 years, remained a distinct and homogeneous people in
the lands of their sojourn. Neither persecution, nor famine, nor
fame or fortune was able to cause them to assimilate with the
peoples of other lands. Could blood ties alone prevent assimilation?
No. It was the Law and the Prophets of Israel which marked them and
preserved them with a common hope and faith while in Diaspora.
Now the pattern of history is broken. A nation is reborn and its
people are coming home to their native land. Notwithstanding the
terrors of pagan Rome, the Crusades, the Inquisition, the ceaseless
proselytizing attempts of Christendom and the ever constant stigma
for those who spurned the advances of the church-state offer of
salvation.
The dispersion of the Jews did not occur by chance. It was
carefully planned and executed by the Roman powers who were at an
end of their patience with this "troublesome" people. Constant
revolt and rebellion on the part of the Israelites caused the Roman
powers to devise a scheme more cunning than the Babylonians. The
Babylonians took the Israelites captive to Babylon, but did not
disperse them further. The Romans knew the Hebrews returned
successfully from Babylon and rebuilt their nation. They were
determined this would never happen again. They carefully
fragmentized the captives and sent them in every direction over the
world of that time. The logic was simple. Once fragmented and
diffused among the nations they would inevitably be assimilated and
lose their identity. With this, their national aspirations would
end. Israel's presence again as an independent nation is a
testimony of a greater plan than the Romans'. Surely, only the Lord
could have preserved this people and brought them again to their
homeland. The Lord carefully forecast the scattering and the
regathering of His people.
Standing at the threshold of the fulfillment of the Lord's
prophecies with respect to His people, at the very dawn of the
Lord's appointment, some in Jewry strangely have lost faith in the
inspiration of the Torah. Even when the Torah is retained, too often
it is viewed for its beauty and history as by distant observers who
fail to grasp the living force of events transpiring in the Divine
destiny for His people. Even when confronted with rare phenomena of
the regathering and rebirth of Israel, somehow Jewry often views
each event as an isolated happening rather than as part of a whole
program designed for world restoration and blessing.
With all that has happened in the regathering and restoration of
Israel, it is often equated as "natural"—the sequel to human
discipline and achievement. While the returned citizens of Israel
are buoyed up with hope, the unheralded truth is that these people
are responding to the magnetic force of the Divine will and the
immutable purpose of God for Israel .
Why should the human impression be so great and faith in the
divine so small? Israel came to the point in her experience when she
learned not to worship heathen images. Is she now to bow before the
deity of humanism'? The spirit of unbelief was not the Abrahamic
heritage. Abraham believed God and grew great, and when Israel
believed their God they prospered. When they disobeyed they failed.
Any other view is not in keeping with their history.
A Favored People
Israel is the only nation with a complete record of its past, an
accurate prophetic portrayal of its present and a complete
description of its destiny among the nations. As a people, they have
suffered and endured more than others, yet viewed from the
standpoint of God's purpose with his people they have been extremely
favored. God's remarkable kindness toward them cannot be appreciated
except by considering the prophetic panorama of Israel's birth,
growth, decline, fall, exile, return and ultimate role in the Divine
Plan of the Ages.
God had something big in mind when he appeared to Father Abraham,
saying, "Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred and from
thy father's house, unto the land that I will show thee. And I will
make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy
name great; and be thou a blessing. And I will bless them that bless
thee, and him that curseth thee I will curse; and in thee shall all
the families of the earth be blessed." (Gen. 12:1) Not only did God
make this immutable promise to Abraham, but to establish for all
time its certainty of fulfillment, he later confirmed it by an oath.
Because He could swear by none greater He swore by Himself, "In
blessing I will bless thee, and in multiplying I will multiply thy
seed as the stars of the heaven, and as the sand which is upon the
seashore; and thy seed shall possess the gate of his enemies; and in
thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed." (Gen.
22:16-18)
Notice the promise has two parts:
- The seed of Abraham is to possess the land forever.
- "In thy (Abraham's) seed shall all the nations of the earth be
blessed."
The role of Israel as a nation of blessing does not fit the past.
Zechariah said, "And it shall come to pass that, as ye were a curse
among other nations, Oh house of Judah and house of Israel, so will I
save you, and ye shall be a blessing." (Zech. 8: 13) From
Zechariah's time to the present this people's role and lot were
without means of prolonging God's blessing for themselves -- much
less other nations. Neither did they have the land for an
everlasting possession. God was speaking of greater things which
cannot be fit into the difficult past. Even Abraham was given
sufficient insights to know that many years would pass before any
hope of obtaining the land would be realized. "Know of a surety that
thy seed shall be a stranger in a land that is not theirs, and shall
serve them; and they shall afflict them four hundred years." (Gen.
15:13) Abraham could not foreknow the great span of time that would
elapse before God completed his commitments. Standing where we are
today, it is apparent God has not been hurried.
The heirs of Abraham all avoided mixing with the world in spite
of natural tendency to assimilate with the world. Joseph, when he
brought his family to Egypt urged them to separate themselves by
telling the Egyptians they were keepers of cattle, for "every
shepherd is an abomination to the Egyptians." (Gen. 46:33, 34) The
plan worked. They remained separate. Egyptian bondage ended under
the leadership of Moses. With a high hand the Lord brought his
people out of Egypt. The deliverance was extraordinary, but as
always the responsibilities assumed in dealing with the living God
almost turned the deliverance to annihilation. Even before the
tables of the Law were delivered, while Moses was in the Mount in
face to face communication with the Lord, God interrupted the
proceedings to announce his readiness to destroy this people and to
make of Moses "a great nation." (Ex. 32:9, 10) Moses' prayer and
plea for Israel succeeded in staying the Divine anger and preserved
this people.
Moses prevailed in still another great encounter with God. The
Divine presence with Israel was becoming a consuming experience. To
avoid unnecessary loss of life the Lord offered to send his angel
before them into Canaan to secure the land for them, adding, "I will
not go up in the midst of thee; lest I consume thee in the way."
(Exod. 33:3) in one of Moses' greatest moments he interceded again,
saying, "If Thy presence go not with me, carry us not up hence. For
wherein now shall it be known that I have found grace in Thy sight,
I and Thy people? is it not in that Thou goest with us, so that we
are distinguished, I and Thy people, from all the people that are
upon the face of the earth? And the Lord said unto Moses, 'I will do
this thing also that thou hast spoken.' " This best explains
Israel's distinctiveness. It also portends something big.
Under Joshua's leadership the land of promise became a reality.
The land was taken and during the favorable period of the judges of
Israel they carried on the experiment of living by the Law of
Moses—with some success and some failure. There is much to be
commended about this period in Israel's history. The most powerful
statement is made by the Lord—"I will restore thy judges as at the
first, and thy counsellors as at the beginning; afterward thou shalt
be called The city of righteousness." (Isa. 1:26) The experiment
under the judges emphasized individual responsibility in keeping the
Law —the higher form of government, self-government.
The reign of kings was the era of compatibility with the
environment. It brought the gains and losses occasioned by
centralized government. It tended to the rule of the individual,
where power corrupts, and weakened the rule of the Law. But Israel
could not escape the consequences of such a system. Every man must
bear his own scepter! Why does the human heart seek to avoid its
freedom and responsibility to rule? While Israel did rise to
prominence among the nations, reaching its zenith of glory under
Solomon, yet it was this very moment the Lord committed the nation
to a division. (See I Kings I 1: 13) The divine decision to divide
the kingdom into two parts led to the decline and fall of this
nation. The two-tribe kingdom endured the longer, but it became a
vassal state and finally came its dispersion under Rome. All of this
had been foretold.
"Her Time of Service is Accomplished"
Israel's history covers two periods of time each of equal length.
The first period began at the death of Jacob. Starting there, the
people of Israel enjoyed God's favor although mixed with punishment.
For 1845 years God blessed them when they served him faithfully.
When they sinned and turned toward evil, He punished them. When they
repented He once more freely received them. But Jeremiah warned of a
time in which they would be punished without national favor.
"Therefore will I cast you out of this land into a land that ye have
not known, neither ye nor your fathers; and there shall ye serve
other gods day and night; forasmuch as I will show you no favor."
(Jer. 16:13) This prophecy applied to the time when God's favor did
end and they were scattered throughout the earth. It could not apply
to the 70 years desolation in Babylon. The scripture says they would
be dispersed "into a land that ye have not known, neither ye nor
your fathers." Abraham, their father, had come from Ur of Chaldea
(Babylonia). His Grandson, Jacob, had come from Syria. (Deut. 26:5)
Therefore the Babylonian captivity did not find them in a land
unknown to their fathers. Not only is the place of their dispersion
different, but the time involved is greater than the 70 years of
desolation. Jeremiah says, "I will recompense their iniquity and
their sin double (mishneh—repetition, duplicate or second portion)."
(Jer. 16:18) The period of disfavor in Diaspora was to be equal to
the period of favor before their rejection and desolation as a
nation. A careful comparison of this double or "mishneh" reveals
that from the death of Jacob to the rejection and desolation of
Israel was a period of 1845 years, and from that time they would be
without national favors for a similar period of 1845 years.
Projecting to the end of Israel's second period, the one of "no
favor," Isaiah said, "Comfort ye, comfort ye My people, saith your
God. Bid Jerusalem take heart, and proclaim unto her, that her time
of service is accomplished, that her guilt is paid off; that she
hath received of the Lord's hand double for all her sins."—Isa.
40:1.
The first indication of returned favor to Zion took place as
early as 1878, 3690 years after the death of Jacob. Not only did
their "double" of favor and disfavor end here but the prophecy of
Ezekiel 37 about the "valley of dry bones" apparently began to have
its fulfillment. Here the dry and withered bones of Israel's hope
began to stir. Sinews came on them—giving them cohesion and
strength, then flesh—giving them substance, and skin—giving them
beauty. In progressive stages they are prepared for the breathing of
life into them, when Israel would live as a hole nation and people
of God.
In 1878 the Berlin Congress of Nations, under the influence of
Lord Beaconsfield (Disraeli), prime minister of England, settled
Turkey's affairs so as to preserve her national existence. Provision
was made, at the same time, that in the event the Turkish nation was
dissolved, the world powers would know which location each could
expect. England became the protector of her Asiatic provinces which
included the land of Israel. Greater liberties were then accorded
these provinces. Thus the Jews enjoyed greater freedom including the
right to buy land and colonize in Palestine—a right denied them for
centuries.
While the great Christian powers stood by with mail-clad hands to
seize the coveted portion of land from the grasp of moribund Turkey,
a historic figure stepped forward and said, "The land is mine!" And
when the nations looked at the speaker, they recognized Israel, the
child of the patriarch Abraham who had lived in Palestine at the
first. A wonderful coincidence? No, it was no coincidence! It was
God's appointment with His people; again His face was turned toward
them and His hands lifted to bless them if they would believe Him
now.
It was these favorable conditions that made possible the
development of the Zionist hopes. Zionism was as dead as the dry
bones Ezekiel saw until Israel’s "time of service" for her sins was
accomplished. When the time to favor Zion again came, the Zionist
movement emerged. Through this noble appeal of Zionism God called
and still calls His erstwhile subjects back to their land.
Many Jewish commentators recognized that Israel's subjection to
the Gentile powers was a period of chastening and disfavor. Hosea
3:4, 5 is quoted as proof, "For the children of Israel shall sit
solitary many days without king, and without prince, and without
sacrifice, and without pillar, and without ephod or teraphim;
afterward shall the children of Israel return, and seek the Lord
their God, and David their king; and shall come trembling unto the
Lord and to His goodness in the end of days." Seeing the children of
Israel returning, is there not good reason to believe we are at "the
end of days" of service or punishment?
Herzl and Zionism
The Berlin Congress of Nations gave to Zionists the first genuine
opportunity to go about with a sparkle in their eyes. It made
possible land purchase in their homeland. This signal awakened
Jewish minds to Divine Providence working on behalf of His people.
One of those great men of vision was Theodore Herzl, whose name
stands as a monument of Zionism.
In 1896 Herzl presented a booklet entitled, "The Jewish State."
He appealed to rich Jews to call a congress of Jews and begin laying
the ground for Zionist activities. The book was a success. An
unexpected success in the wrong quarter. He thought the rich Jews
would spearhead the movement. He was wrong. The poor and oppressed
Jews all over Europe and Russia arose to the appeal. Zionism came to
bloom.
When the Kishinev pogrom and severe persecution meant thousands
of Jews had to flee with no place to go that was friendly, Herzl was
ready to accept the British offer of land in Uganda. It was
practical salvation for the Jews who faced death—humanitarian ideals
led him to accept even this land to save his people. Herzl's face
turned white when the sixth Zionist Congress said no to Uganda. The
lives of some of his kinsmen could not supersede the Divine Destiny
and it was then he realized with all those there assembled, that
Zionism was linked in-separably with Palestine. There could be no
alternative.
Herzl lighted the Zionist torch and carried it high and
magnificently, but it remained for Chaim Weizmann to plant the torch
in Palestine and gain the international recognition of the rights of
the Jewish people to their former homeland. Chaim Weizmann, by the
providence of God, secured for his people the Balfour Declaration,
November 2, 1917.
Message from the late
Prime Minister Levi
Eshkol
One development whose crucial character remains beyond question
was the . . . Balfour Declaration. This was indeed an event of
paramount national, international and historic significance. The
promise it held out went far beyond the formal undertaking of the
British Government to facilitate the establishment of a Jewish
national home in Palestine: implicit in this Declaration and
herein lies its deeper import—was the promise of a general
international recognition of the historic rights of the Jewish
people in Palestine, a recognition to be realized a few years
later in a decision of the League of Nations.
David Ben-Gurion was aware of one important fact overlooked
generally by Jewry. In an article on the Balfour Declaration,
published November 14 in "Der Yiddish Kampfer," the organ of the
Poale Zion movement in America, he said:
A miracle happened and the broken vessel was made whole
again.... England has not restored our land to us. Precisely now
at this moment of triumph, it should be emphatically stated: it is
nor in England's power to return our land to us. Not because the
land is not, or not yet, in her possession. After the entire
country, from Beersheba to Dan, is conquered by the British, it
will not be ours even with their consent, and even if all the
nations of the world agree to it. No people can establish title to
a land except through its own toil, creative effort and
settlement.
England has done a great thing: it has recognized our existence
as a political entity and acknowledged our right to the Land. But
the Hebrew people itself must transform this into a living fact.
Through its own efforts of body, soul and material assets it must
set up its national home and complete its national
redemption.
The American Zionists did not receive Ben-Gurion's words
favorably. To many in Jewry the Balfour Declaration was the end of
the matter, the Balfour Declaration was eternal, and whenever any
Hebrew felt dis-posed to go back to his homeland the opportunity
would be there with iron-clad guarantee.
The British were the first to observe that the Jewish people were
not in a hurry to return. Aryeh Pincus, Chairman of the Jewish
Agency Executive observed: "Between 1917 and the Churchill White
Paper of 1922—severing Trans-jordan from the Jewish National
Home—there was abundant room for fast and widespread colonization.
But aliya came in trickles, and the small numbers spread out over
the years could not prevent the consolidation of Arab complicity.
This failure made it easy for the British to high-light the fact
that Trans-jordan was not essential to Jewish national
aspirations."
Lord Arthur James Balfour told Dr. Weizmann after the approval of
the Balfour Declaration and the decision on the British Mandate at
the San Remo Conference: "Now you have got the signal to start, but
you yourself will have to do the running." Failure on the part of
Jewry the world over to press into the land shows that few of them
were in touch with reality. While those in Russia were sealed within
the Bolshevik bastion, those elsewhere—free to return—found it
difficult to be more than spectators and were unprepared to "run" to
the land of promise.
The Balfour Declaration did start a small return of Jewry to
Palestine and the work of rehabilitation and reclaiming the land was
under way. "For who hath despised the day of small things." (Zech.
4:10) Ironically, the Nazi persecution, which was bent on destroying
world Jewry and came near to its goals in Europe, became the very
force that guaranteed the survival of Israel. Ben-Gurion said,*
"Jews from Germany provided the country with know-how, ability,
capital and initiative." David Ben-Gurion also observed that in
1933, immigrations "rose to 30,377, in 1934, to 42,259, and in 1935,
62,000." This fact reminds us of Psalm 76:11: "Surely the wrath of
man shall praise Thee; the residue of wrath shalt Thou gird upon
Thee."
The Timing and Significance of the
Balfour
Declaration
Those living in the new state of Israel need no convincing of the
importance of the Balfour Declaration. It was the only constructive
outcome of World War 1. The Balfour Declaration was overshadowed by
the Bolshevik Revolution, but often truly great events go
unheralded. The violent always captures world recognition.
The Balfour Declaration was made November 2, 1917. It was not a
world-shaking event, but a small political concession at a time when
the world was on fire. It excited no one except a few men with
Zionistic hopes. But even here, it was only a conversation piece,
because few Jews took seriously any thought of returning to
Palestine. However, persecuted Jewry in Russia was coming to the
end of its rope. The plight of the Jews in Russia was the main
argument by which the faint heart of the British were finally
persuaded to give the Jew his homeland. The war had brought an end
to the emigration of Jews from Russia to other lands and in view of
their pitiful plight, the British gave their consent for a homeland
in Palestine.
November 7, 1917, five days later, the Bolshevik Revolution
erupted and invalidated the main argument of the Balfour
Declaration. The Revolution sealed the Jewish population within
Russia where they remain until this time. Needless to say, despite
the claims of comradship, the Jews are still identified as Jews in
Russia and they are discriminated against. Zionists in Russia must
wait until the Lord fulfills His promise to bring them "from the
land of the north." (Jer. 16:15) The important thing is that the
Russian Revolution came five days too late to prevent the Balfour
Declaration. Nor can the children of Abraham be detained within the
boundaries of Russia very much longer. The Lord will regather His
people from the land of the "north."
The Bolshevik Revolution unleashed a force in the world that will
help bring the nations to an end, while Israel rises to shine. A
destructive force is at one hand and a building force at the other.
We are living at this transition time. At ancient Israel's decline,
the Gentile powers, by divine grant, were given dominion. The
Babylonian captivity ended God's kingdom nation and gave rise to
universal Gentile dominion. Daniel's concern was for his people.
Daniel saw Babylon devour his nation. He then saw Babylon fall and
Medes and Persians assume dominion. He knew Israel must wait. His
interpretation of Nebuchadnezzar's dream indicates that four
successive empires would hold world dominion. As long as the
Gentiles held dominion it would not be Israel's. But there was hope.
Summing up the vision, Daniel said: "And in the days of those kings
shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom, which shall never be
destroyed; nor shall the kingdom be left to another people; it shall
break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms, but it shall stand
for ever." - Dan. 2:44
THE GENTILE TIMES—How Long?
"7 Times" (Years) — There is a scriptural parallel in Israel's
punishment and Nebuchadnezzar's madness both involve "7 times." The
Lord punished Nebuchadnezzar with madness 7 literal years for his
pride and failure to acknowledge His sovereignty. (See Dan. 4:16,
23, 25, 32; in Masoretic Dan. 4:13, 20, 22, 29) God threatened
Israel with "7 times'' of punishment if they disobeyed Him. (Lev.
26:21, 24) What meaning is there in these time parallels'? in
Ezekiel 4:6 is found the basis for figuring time: "forty days, each
day for a year, have I appointed it unto thee.''
The degradation of Nebuchadnezzar was typical of human
degradation under the four beastly governments during seven
symbolic "times" or years - a year for a day, 2520 (7 x 360 = 2520)
literal years. It is interesting to note that this time period
parallels the period when the crown was taken away from Israel and
it ceased to be an independent kingdom nation. The last king of the
two-tribe kingdom of Judah was Zedekiah. Upon removing him the Lord
said: "Oh wicked one, that art to be slain, the prince of Israel,
whose day is come, in the time of iniquity of the end; thus saith
the Lord God: The mitre shall be removed, and the crown taken old:
this shall be no more the same: that which is low shall be exalted.
and that which is high abased. A ruin, a ruin, a ruin, will I make
it; this also shall be no more, until he come whose right it is, and
I will give it him." Ezek. 21:25-27
The removal of the crown marked the end of a kingdom nation
identified with God. This was forecast at the very outset when God
outlined the possibility of blessing and the alternative of cursing
that might befall His people. In Leviticus 26, after speaking of the
possible blessings, God warned: "And if ye will not yet for these
things hearken unto Me, then I will chastise you seven times more
for your sins." In vs. 21 and 24 the Lord repeats the same threat of
7 times of punishment for sin. If the clue of Ezekiel is followed,
the 7 symbolic times (7 x 360 = 2520) comes to 2520 actual years.
The period of Gentile rule is depicted by Nebuchadnezzar's madness,
the time also of Israel's punishment and humiliation. Gentile
dominion starting with Babylonian conquest of Israel under
Nebuchadnezzar to World War I measures 2520 years. The figures being
correct, we could expect 1914 to be the beginning or the end of
Gentile dominion and the beginning of Israel's ascent. And so it was
As the Gentile dominion crumbled with all its ruling houses of
splendor, so the Balfour Declaration lighted the star of David in
Palestine. The Bolshevik Revolution guaranteed the continued
consumption of Gentile power.
World War 11 ended with the atomic holocaust, leaving the world
frightened as it looked on the awesome powers poised to destroy the
human race. The second war brought the world into an inescapable
whirlpool drawing them to Armageddon. The only good that came of the
World War 11 debacle was the subsequent partition of the land of
Palestine and the birth of Israel in 1948. For the rest of the world
the loss was staggering and ended forever the dream of returning to
the status quo. The consuming process will continue upon the Gentile
powers. The nation of Israel can only ascend in influence. In
Jeremiah 30:11 the Lord's intentions concerning Israel are declared
as well as his intentions concerning those nations wherein His
people have been dispersed: "For I am with thee, saith the Lord, to
save thee; for I will make a full end of all the nations whither I
have scattered thee, but I will not make a full end Of thee; for I
will correct thee in measure, and will not utterly destroy
thee."
The Lesson of Jewry in Russia
The Balfour Declaration and the Bolshevik seizure of power,
dis-similar though they were, have special lessons for world Jewry
today. Joel Carmichael, in an article in the Jerusalem Post, Nov. 2,
1967, said:
"In terms of human material the kinship between the Russian
revolutionaries and the Zionist activists was striking . . . The
relationship between movements, was, indeed, a sort of intellectual
rivalry. This was heightened all the more because of the great
preponderance of Jews in the Russian revolutionary movement, at
least before 1905. Restless Jewish youths, infected by enlightenment
and wide open to all the ideas of world reform currently corroding
traditional society, very naturally tended to slip into the Russian
movement. Since traditional Jewish society was also being attacked
by the new ideas, any Jew abandoning traditional Jewish values
without becoming assimilated had a very natural set of
alternatives—socialism, or the new Jewish nationalism called
Zionism.... The tug of war between cosmopolitan socialism— which
gradually came to be predominantly Marxism—and Zionism for the souls
of Jewish youth was thus a very natural, as it were organic,
development. It was also a tug of war in which the major forces
appeared to be on the side of the socialists, or more particularly
the Marxists.... Yet it was intellectually often difficult for
Zionist debaters to withstand the sweeping claims made by socialists
and especially by Marxists. The Marxists, who after all took all
human society and all human history as their arena, naturally tended
to look down on Zionists. ... it required great character and
devotion for early Zionists, the debates that raged between the two
movements for so many decades, to insist on the really quite
simple-minded proposition that they chose to remain Jews.... Zionism
in its essence really did no more than proclaim the fact of Jewish
identity, the significance of Jewish continuity, and the
determination to restore that identity and continuity in a certain
way in a certain place. One can easily visualize the painful
condescension the early Zionists had to put up with from their
Marxist adversaries...."
He goes on to observe the contrast in results: Marxism, on the
other hand, which in its prostate days did have valuable things to
say, has been simplified, institutionalized and dogmatized, i.e.,
made compulsory. It has been, in fact magicalized, and its magic has
been made an accessory of sanctified authority....
"It is probably Zionism and its offspring, the State of Israel,
that now provide ... the sole rallying-point for the whole of the
Communist world, now divided on so many other issues. It must be
deeply embittering for the many Jews living in Israel to be forced
to contemplate the perversion of all the ideals of the Russian
Revolution, forced to witness not merely the anti-Israel political
tactics of the Soviet Government but the recrudescence of vulgar
anti-Semitism in the Soviet Union itself. It may be a consolation
for them to reflect that many of the ideals of the Russian
revolutionary movement, what may in fact be called its human core,
have been transplanted to the soil of Israel."
The Jewish people have always been amenable to ideals, high
ideals, but all too often they have been trying to give themselves
to the world, thinking it too parochial to give themselves to
Zionism and its embodiment—the State of Israel. They overlook the
fact that the more they have tried to give themselves to the world
the less they have endeared themselves with the world and, in the
end, the more they have contributed to the suffering of their
kinsmen.
Their heritage is a parochial one. Abraham, their father, was the
heir of a parochial promise—"in thy seed shall all the families of
the earth be blessed." The end result would embrace all men, the
promise was parochial only in designating the seed.
Abraham forsook Ur of the Chaldees for the parochial promise of
God. Moses forsook the world embodied in Egypt and chose to identify
with the descendants of Abraham. These did not give themselves to
the world, but through God's providence, they gave the world some of
its great treasures. In like manner, all who are of the line of
Abraham, marked with the pen of Moses, need not give themselves to
the world— but the world shall seek them. "Ten men shall take hold
of the skirt of him that is a Jew saying: we will go with you, for
we have heard that God is with you."—Zech. 8:23
While the day has not yet come when the world seeks Israel,
neither has the day come when Israel's people seek the Lord with all
their heart. But, the day of God's favor has already dawned upon
this nation. The fulfillment of prophecy is unfolding before our
eyes—moving progressively toward the fulfillment of God's promise
to bless all the families of earth.
The Return of God's Favor
"Thou wilt arise, and have compassion upon Zion; for it is time
to be gracious unto her, for the appointed time is come." (Psa.
102:14) There is a visible scale of observation in our time on which
we may begin to measure the fulfillment of prophecy.
(I) The Ingathering of the Exiles. Isaiah 43:5, 6 is one
of many prophecies that foretells the regathering of the Jewish
people to the promised land. It reads: "Fear not, for I am with
thee; I will bring thy seed from the east and gather thee from the
west; I will say to the north: Give up, and to the south: Keep not
back, bring My sons from far, and My daughters from the end of the
earth." The Jewish people have been gathered from the four corners
of the earth. Nearly 3 millions are assembled in the land of their
fathers, coming from 75 different countries. Still the work
continues. For God said: "As the Lord liveth, that brought up the
children of Israel from the land of the north, and from all the
countries whither He had driven them; and I will bring them back
into their land that I gave unto their fathers. Behold, I will send
for many fishers, saith the Lord, and they shall fish them; and
afterward I will send for many hunters, and they shall hunt them
from every mountain, and from every hill, and out of the clefts of
the rocks."—Jer. 16:15, 16.
The Zionist movement compares to the fishing method of gathering.
The Zionist activities provided the land with a vital nucleus of
people that enabled it to become the new state of Israel. The "many
hunters" would be those persecuting forces that led the Jews to face
the necessity of return to Palestine. The early persecutions of the
Jews in Russia and Europe served to turn many faces toward the
homeland. The early Nazi persecution forced a considerable number of
educated and talented Jews to Palestine. These brought the necessary
technology and human re-sources to prosper Israel. In that the
fishing and hunting referred to by Jeremiah was with the view to
bringing the children of Israel home, did the later Nazi persecution
also fit this purpose? It was more than persecution. It was a
diabolical attempt to destroy the "seed of Abraham" and to make
void the promise of God. Even the Nazi attempt to drive eastward in
Africa to take the Holy Land indicates that a superhuman attempt was
being made to frustrate the Divine Plan. It is clear the Nazi's plan
was to annihilate the whole race of Jews, not after they conquered
the world, but while they were engaged in doing so. Even when they
knew the war was lost, they kept the incinerators going until the
last moment of defeat. The failure of the Christian churches to
protest and their willingness to cooperate with the Nazi insanity
has raised many eyebrows. How could Christian nations look the other
way while the slaughter went on? The scripture still has not lost
its meaning: "I will bless them that bless you and I will curse them
that curse you." (Gen. 12:3) God is a God of judgment. (I Sam. 2:3)
This is one truth the modern generation will not own. The time of
reckoning is here.
(2) The Reclamation of the Land. Amos 9:14 describes the
work of the regathered people in their land—"they shall build the
waste cities, and inhabit them: and they shall plant vineyards, and
drink the wine thereof; they shall also make gardens, and eat the
fruit of them."
In 1905 the Prime Minister of the Netherlands observed, "The Jews
have come in vain. Only God can check the blight of the inrushing
desert." A miracle has happened. Miles of malaria-infested "no-man's
land" have been drained; deserts have been irrigated and the land is
being transformed into an Eden of citrus-bearing trees. The barren
hillsides and the dried-up desert wastes are taking on new life,
returning to the fertility of old. The work goes steadily on.
The land reclamation is an observable feature as the beginning of
the fulfillment of prophecy, a small beginning, but one that shall
grow and "fill the whole earth."
We bypass the opportunity to mention the many and varied
accomplishments in Israel because of lack of space. But since the
1967 war an especially interesting beginning of fulfillment focuses
on Isaiah 35:1, 2. The prophet here said that the "Arava will
rejoice and blossom as the rose." The "Arava" is not "wilderness" in
general, but that specific desert valley that lies between the Dead
Sea and Eilat. Drilling in the Arava has brought in artesian wells
flowing with sufficient quantities of good water to irrigate large
fields. Through the season vegetables now grown in the Arava are
flown regularly to Europe, and the quantity is expected to increase
so much that vegetables shall be shipped by refrigerated ships,
while the strawberries and roses will be Gown out as exports. Truly,
the Arava is blossoming as the rose, as prophecy marks its beginning
of fulfillment.
(3) "And Jerusalem shall be inhabited again in her own place,
even in Jerusalem" (Zech. 12:6). Up until the victory of 1967
the Jerusalem that belonged to Israel was the new part of the city.
True to this prophecy, the Lord did not intend to divide the city of
Jerusalem, but his intention was that Jerusalem would again be in
its own "place, even in Jerusalem." Here is an almost incredible
fulfillment.
The context of Zechariah's prophecy indicates the role Jerusalem
shall play as the nations "burden" themselves with the Holy City.
The Lord says, "I will make Jerusalem a stone of burden for all the
peoples; all that burden themselves with it shall be sore wounded;
and all the nations of the earth shall be gathered together against
it." (Zech. 12:3) That Jerusalem should come into the hands of the
Israeli has been an embarrassment even to those sympathetic with the
cause of Israel. The nations are burdened with this problem. Instead
of accepting this matter as the Lord's doing the nations are intent
upon getting involved. Yet Jerusalem's destiny is certain. Though
the nations gather against it, they only stand to be wounded in the
process. They cannot remove Jerusalem from its rightful owners nor
the owners from their rightful possession. Powerful kings and popes
have long coveted the Holy City, sending Crusades one after another
to take the city. They always failed. These world leaders were
prepared to make enormous sacrifices to get this city. If they could
have fulfilled their purpose they would have made its streets of
gold and its gates of pearl. If they could have possessed this city,
how it would have strengthened their claims to be the Kingdom of
God. However, with all the power and wealth these world leaders were
mocked in all their claims to be the Kingdom of God. Why? Because
who does not know that when God's kingdom is established, "Out of
Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the Lord from
Jerusalem." (Isa. 2:2, 3) The kingdom of God will be Israelitish.
Jerusalem will be its seat of government.
(4) Return of People to God. The turning of the hearts
of the Jewish people to their God is somewhat lacking. Oh, yes,
there are many who believe in God, but who have not the faith of
Abraham who believed God. Religious Zionism was not the main
incentive for the great regathering. Political Zionism, practical
Zionism and persecution provided the main motivations for the
present exodus. But this is in itself a (fulfillment of prophecy.
Political and practical Zionism will yet develop religious roots.
Ezekiel 20:32-37, specially directed toward the assimilationist Jew,
reads: "that which cometh into your mind shall not be at all; in
that ye say: we will be as the nations, as the families of the
countries, to serve wood and stone. As I live, saith the Lord God,
surely with a mighty hand . . . and with fury poured out, . . . will
I . . . gather you out of the countries wherein ye are scattered, .
. . and there will I plead with you face to face.... And I will
cause you to pass under the rod, and I will bring you into the bond
of the covenant." The Lord says he would "plead" with the people
during the regathering—it is a "face to face" encounter, indicating
the Lord's face is upon them. The purpose is to reach the heart of
his people. The work of cleansing shall however be accomplished
after the regathering into the land.
In Ezekiel 36:24-28 God says: "I will take you from among the
nations, and gather you out of all the countries, and will bring you
into your own land. And I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye
shall be clean; . . . A new heart also will I give you, and a new
spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart
out of your flesh, and I will give you a heart of flesh. And I will
put My spirit within you, and cause you to walk in My statutes, and
ye shall keep Mine ordinances, and do them. And ye shall dwell in
the land that I gave to your fathers; and ye shall be My people, and
I will be your God." Such being the case, we need not look askance
at those returning to the Holy Land in an unclean state of heart. It
is after the regathering that the Lord has promised to "sprinkle
clean water upon" them.
The Torah and the Land
Man has a capacity for law. Where man is there is law. His
progress and advancement are in direct relation to his capacity to
understand and abide by law. No one has given to the world a greater
legacy than did Moses when he gave Israel and the world the Law of
God. Nothing has contributed more to human dignity and honor than
the Law of Moses— both for Israel and, to the extent it was copied,
the civilized world. Particularly in this civilized world of the
present time there is a great, an almost uncontrolled passion, for
remedying all the problems of men on all levels. Yet strangely men
find it increasingly difficult to remedy world problems while living
under the noblest of laws.
When law ceases to be a high standard, and when men need not
stand on tiptoe to reach it, it ceases to serve man's greatest need.
Man's course tends downward. Nobility comes by guided discipline and
conscious endeavor and not by abandonment. Much of the present study
and research on man is based on observing him as he is -- whereas
the real need is to know what man must be. What man must be is not
observable, however. The scientific method has nothing to conclude
when it has nothing to observe. Moses gave Israel and the world
something that science could never give. He gave them God's law, the
standard, and since that day till now it has been a light in the
world.
Moses reminded Israel of how God "afflicted thee, and suffered
you to hunger, and fed thee with manna, which thou knewest not,
neither did thy fathers know; that He might make thee know that man
doth not live by bread only, but by every thing that proceedeth out
of the mouth of God doth man live." (Deut. 8:3) Man may choose to
live by the word of men—such is their privilege. However, they
cannot escape from the consequences of their choice.
When Israel received the law of God from Moses it was immediately
apparent to them that it was worthy of their highest commitment.
They said: "All the words which the Lord hath spoken will we do."
(Exod. 23:4) Now, centuries later, it is quite discernible that the
promise was not in line with the performance. Yet, despite repeated
failure at keeping the law, the decision was a good one, lifting
this people and nation above others in many ways and underscoring
their failures. In their successes and failures the great value of
the law was in its ability to teach the needs of men as well as the
consequences of yielding to the inner weaknesses.
In addition to the moral aspect of the Torah, there were the
ordinances of worship. The Feast of Tabernacles, Feast of Passover,
the new moons, etc., synchronize with the agricultural cycles of the
land of Israel. Consequently, the centuries of daily prayers uttered
by the Jews in Diaspora are only made meaningful by one place on
earth—Eretz Israel with its uniquely interwoven harvests and lunar
cycles. The Torah molded the Israelites to the land. The Torah made
the land of Canaan Eretz Israel. The Torah gave Israel deep abiding
roots in the land that date back over 35 centuries. The Torah was
and is Israel's heritage in Eretz Israel. That is why, after the
current regathering, Ezekiel (36:24-28) reveals that God will "cause
you (Israel) to walk in My statutes, and ye shall keep My ordinances
and do them. And ye shall dwell in the land that I gave to your
fathers: and ye shall be My people and I will be your God." This is
the hand of Divine Providence, before which all other claims to the
land must bow.
How Deep are the Palestinian Roots?
Jordan seized the West Bank, including Jerusalem, in the '48 War.
But in 1967 the people of the Bible obtained their historic
territories, Judea and Samaria. All during Jordan's 19 year
occupation there was not one Arab cry for a Palestinian State on the
West Bank. Instead the cry was for a Palestinian State on the ruins
of the Israeli State. But once Israel occupied the West Bank there
was a united Arab demand for a Palestinian State on the West
Bank.
Over the years millions of dollars have been spent in a P.L.O.
propaganda campaign which is changing the tide of world opinion. The
Arabs' "moral right to a Palestinian State" is fast becoming a
majority concept. But both the Bible and history confirm the shallow
roots of the Palestinians.
During the "double" of disfavor, Divine Providence kept-the land
desolate of man and beast until God's appointed time to "favor
Zion." (Isa. 40:1, 2; Psa. 102:13) Many scriptures foretold this
desolation. Why? So that there would be ample room for the mass
return of the Jewish people to Eretz Israel. Isaiah speaks of
repairing "the waste cities, the desolations of many
generations."—Isaiah 61:4; Amos 9:14; Ezekiel 36:33-35
From 1200 CE to 1917 CE there was uninterrupted Moslem rule in
Palestine. For over 600 years Arabs had free access to Palestine;
yet Philip Hitti, the noted Arab historian, observed that the total
population of Palestine in the 1840s was less than 180,000. This
included Arabs, Turks, Christians and Jews. This shows that Arab
families did not develop roots in Pales-tine. They did not for the
most part remain in Palestine generation after generation. Rather,
Palestine was always considered undesirable. It was a place Arabs
wandered in and out of according to economic need—but not to settle
and develop a continuity of family roots that span the centuries. By
Divine intent the Arab population in the 1840s was both meager and
shallow rooted so that there would be ample room for a mass return
of the children of Israel "to the land that I gave to their
fathers."—Jer. 30:3
When the return of the exiles began in the 1870s the economy of
the land took an upswing. Arabs followed the Jews to Eretz Israel to
enjoy the new prosperity. One of the most important books in recent
years on the Arab-Israeli conflict is entitled From Time Immemorial
by Joan Das Peters. Peters proves that Arabs did not live in western
Palestine from time immemorial, but moved there only after Jews had
settled and developed the area. For example between 1933 and 1936,
over 30,000 Arabs left Iraq, Syria and Trans-Jordan for "the better
life" in Palestine. In 1946 Bartley C. Crum, a United States
Government observer, noted that tens of thousands of Arabs had
entered Palestine because of this better life and they were still
coming. Most of the Palestinian refugees are the Arabs or
descendants of Arabs who entered Palestine since the 1880s.
A Word About the Refugee Problem
The "refugee problem" should have been solved in 1948 when it
began. Approximately 600,000 Arabs were displaced in that war. What
is not as well known is that 600,000 Jews who were living in Arab
nations had to flee for their lives because of Arab hatred. The
solution to this double refugee problem was simple—an even exchange.
The Israelis opened up their arms and absorbed the 600,000 Jewish
refugees. The Arab nations refused to absorb the Arab refugees.
Instead, they placed them in refugee camps which became showplaces
of hate and misery that turned world opinion against Israel. Less
than one percent of one year's Arab oil in-come could comfortably
settle the so-called "Palestinian refugees" in Arab lands.
The current struggle between Arabs and Jews to territorial rights
in the Middle East dates back to the breaking up of the Turkish
Empire by the Allies at the end of World War 1. Both Arabs and Jews
requested in-dependent states in this vast territory. The world
powers were generous in the extreme to the Arabs by granting them 21
independent Arab states so that they now enjoy sovereignty over
1,250,000 square miles. The Jews asked for only three percent of
this vast territory for a national home in Palestine. The Allied
powers agreed. In 1922 the League of Nations recognized the legal,
moral and historic right of the Jewish people to a national home in
Palestine, including the West Bank and Jerusalem.
Then vast oil reserves were discovered in Arab lands.
Consequently, when Israel was finally granted independence in 1948,
international intrigue resulted in Israel receiving less than
one-half of one percent of the territory given to Arab states. Since
then, the worsening oil crisis has caused world powers to become
progressively more supportive of the Arab nations.
If the Jews had a right to the West Bank and Jerusalem in 1922,
that right is valid today.
Psalm 83 describes the determination of the Arabs to destroy
Israel. However, Isaiah 11:14 shows that Israel will finally gain a
decisive victory over the Arabs. And thus the Arab-Israeli conflict
will finally be resolved and peace will finally be achieved.
Genesis 15:18 shows that the ultimate boundaries of Israel will
be from the river of Egypt unto the Euphrates River. More
specifically, Zech. 10:9-10, Micah 7:14 and Zech. 12:6 prophesied
that Israel would acquire the West Bank, East Jerusalem, the Golan
Heights (Bashan) and even the East Bank (Gilead) during the current
Israeli-Arab conflict. Therefore, according to Scriptural and
historical roots, not only the West Bank, but the East Bank as well
belongs to Israel.
Since 1922 Zionist leaders have time and again been willing to
accept territorial compromise. However, Divine Providence has had a
way of over-ruling these compromises. If, for the sake of peace,
Israel surrenders portions of the West Bank, Golan Heights or
Jerusalem, the above scriptures indicate Israel will once again
acquire these territories before her final victory over the Arabs
(Isaiah 11:14).
Michael Shall Stand-up
Back to Top
"And at that time shall Michael stand up, the great prince who
standeth for the children of thy people: and there shall be a time
of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even to that
same time; and at that time thy people shall be delivered." (Dan.
12:1 ) Daniel's burden and prayer was for Israel. The answer Daniel
gives points to the Messiah as "Michael." It is He, "the great
prince who standeth for the children of thy people" (the descendants
of Israel). Who can observe events surrounding the restoration of
Israel, at the right time in the right place, without a sense of awe
and wonderment? Surely there is One standing for the "children of
thy people." It is equally true that the regathering and restoration
of this people to their homeland has taken place in the most
troublesome time in human history. The time of trouble is upon us.
who can deny in the face of two world wars, in the face of
thermonuclear war with guided missiles capable of being delivered
anywhere, that we are in the day spoken of by Daniel.
In Israel, the day before Independence Day is a Memorial day to
those who died in order to secure the independence. In 1968, at the
memorial service in Ashkelon, one of the speakers, moved by the
successes of the 1967 war as well as other events said: "Look, the
Old City of Jerusalem is now in Israel. The Western Wall and the
Temple area are in our hands. Think! This can only mean one thing.
Either the Messiah is coming very soon, or he is here already." Not
all are prepared to receive a personal Messiah, as the "prince" who
stands for Israel. Some are inclined to think of Israel itself as
the Messiah.
While Israel is still Rushed with its military successes, it is
only natural for it to trust to its internal and material
capabilities. But these shall fail! Israel's extremity will become
God's opportunity to manifest His power. Ezekiel 38:1-13 gives a
detailed prophecy of this event. Some apply this to the Hitler
massacre, overlooking that it applies at a time Israel is dwelling
safely in the land. He describes the enemies of God's people, called
"Gog"—a representative force of all nations—and shows how they will
come against the "unwalled" or relatively defenseless people of
Israel to despoil them. These invasion forces will include some of
the major world powers. Israel will be helpless in its own power.
Those Israelites who trust in the "arm of flesh" will go forth, only
to fall before the enemy. The concept that Israel itself is the
Messiah will fall with them. But those who believe God and trust in
the "arm of the Lord" will see the glory of God when he fights for
his people as he did in the day of battle. The formidable forces of
Gog will be destroyed by Divine power. (Zech. 14:2, 3; Isa. 28:21;
Jer. 31:7-9) of this time the Prophet says; "They shall know that I
am the Lord their God, . . . neither will I hide My face any more
from them; for I have poured out My spirit upon the house of Israel,
saith the Lord God." (Ezek. 39:28, 29) Then Israel will realize
their Messiah is a powerful spirit being, and that it is He that has
been standing on their behalf through the return of favor to Zion,
through the regathering process, through establishment in the
homeland, and finally the deliverance of this nation from the forces
of Gog and Magog. Then not only shall Israel know, but the nations
shall learn their needed lessons. Zechariah (14:16) speaks
concerning the people left after Gog is destroyed: "And it shall
come to pass, that every one that is left of all the nations that
came against Jerusalem shall go up from year to year to worship the
King, the Lord of hosts, and to keep the feast of tabernacles."
Favor Fulfilled in Zion
We have followed the events from the first step in the return of
favor to Zion in the Berlin Congress of Nations, the Balfour
Declaration, the regathering and rebirth of the nation and on into
Gog's invasion and God's intervention on Israel's behalf. These
events must be viewed as progressive steps in God's purpose if we
are to possess or be possessed by the hope this holds for those
waiting for the consolation of Israel and the world.
The days when God is removed from men are ending. Not only are
the forces of Gog to be defeated, but the way they are defeated will
be a revelation to the world. "Thus will I magnify Myself, and
sanctify Myself, and I will make Myself known in the eyes of many
nations; and they shall know that I am the Lord." (Ezek. 38:23) Even
the burial goof this mighty force serves to remind the world of
God's stately intervention. "There shall they bury Gog and all his
multitude: and they shall call it "the valley of Hamongog." (Ezek.
39:11) Hamon means "multitude" or the "multitude of Gog." But it
may also be a play on words, a reminder of Haman who would have
Mordecai destroyed only to be destroyed on his own
gallows—Haman-Gog. The Lord will manifest his hand to Israel and to
the world.
The Psalmist depicts this time saying: "Come, behold the works of
the Lord, Who hath made desolations in the earth. He maketh wars to
cease unto the end of the earth; He breaketh the bow, and cutteth
the spear in sunder: He burneth the chariots in the fire. 'Let be,
and know that I am God: I will be exalted among the nations, I will
be exalted in the earth.' The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of
Jacob is our high tower." -Psa. 46:8- 12.
Daniel was told "go thou thy way till the end be and thou shalt
rest, and shall stand up to thy lot, at the end or the days." (Dan.
12: 13) This must mean Daniel himself will again appear on the
scene, resurrected and invested with princely power, to stand as a
ruler in Israel. What about Abraham'? Did not the lord promise him
the land of Israel for an everlasting possession'? Yet he received
not a foot of it in his lifetime! This can only mean that Abraham
must return as heir to the land—the title to the land belongs to him
first and to Israel second. God must fulfill His promise to Abraham.
Did not Job share the view of the resurrection from the dead when he
said, "Oh that thou wouldest hide me in the nether-world, that Thou
wouldest keep me secret, until Thy wrath be past, that Thou wouldest
appoint me a set time, and remember me! . . . Thou wouldest call,
and I would answer Thee"?—Job 14:13-15
God never ceased to be identified with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob
even though they were dead. He identified himself to Moses, saying:
"The God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob . ."
(Exod. 3: 15) Surely the end of the days are nearing when Daniel and
all the heroes of faith of Israel past will "stand on their lot."
This should not seem an extravagant hope when the promise is made
that "Sodom and her daughters shall return to their former estate."
(Ezek. 16:53-63) Rachel, weeping for her children was promised,
"Refrain thy voice from weeping, and thine eyes from tears; for thy
work shall be rewarded, saith the Lord; and they shall come back
from the land of the enemy. And there is hope for thy future, saith
the Lord; and thy children shall return to their own border." (Jer.
31:16, 17) Surely, the hope of resurrection is abundant; it includes
those of the inner circle of God's favor and those estranged from
Him.
In that the arabah is already beginning to blossom as the rose,
it is only reasonable to look for the fulfillment of the whole of
Isaiah 35: "Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears
of the deaf shall be unstopped. Then shall the lame man leap as a
hart, and the tongue of the dumb shall sing; . . . and a highway
shall be there, and a way, and it shall be called The way of
holiness; . . . the redeemed shall walk there; and the ransomed of
the Lord shall return and come with singing unto Zion, and
everlasting joy shall be upon their heads; they shall obtain
gladness and joy, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away." With such
promises as these before Israel and the world, let none fail to
recognize God's kingdom which will grow and fill the whole earth.
(Dan. 2:35, 44)
God's immutable promise to bless "all the families of the earth"
is in the dawn of fulfillment. This promise will result in the
grandest reconciliation between God and men. "And in this mountain
will the Lord of hosts make unto all peoples a feast of fat things,
a feast of wines on the lees, of fat things full of marrow, of wines
on the lees well refined. And He will destroy in this mountain the
face of the covering that is cast over all peoples, and the veil
that is spread over all nations. He will swallow up death for ever;
and the Lord God will wipe away tears from off all faces; and the
reproach of His people will He take away from off all the earth; for
the Lord hath spoken it. And it shall be said in that day: 'Lo, this
is our God, for whom we waited, that He might save us; this is the
Lord for whom we waited, we will be glad and rejoice in His
salvation.' "—Isa. 25:6-9
The Challenge
The present, however, remains a critical time in Israel's
history. Having emerged from the uncomforted mourning and suffering
of her dispersion, emerging as a nation under the shadow of
6,000,000 tormented and slaughtered Jews, standing alone among
hostile neighbors, Israel stands now to be divided between those who
trust in the arm of flesh and those who trust in the arm of Jehovah.
Israel's history teaches that it can only prosper when it serves its
Lord God with all its heart and soul and strength. It is only those
who believe God, as did Abraham of old, who will remain the children
of Abraham and worthy to inherit the land as an everlasting
inheritance—becoming the nation of blessing to all the families of
the earth. For the Jews the wages of unbelief have been costly and
terrible beyond description, and yet even now nation al pride stands
ready to envelop them. Will they remember that as a nation they can
know no life divided from God? In no part of Israel's history has
she been blessed and had rest except when she abode "under the
shadow of the Almighty."
Israel's hopes center in God's immutable choice and election of
this nation to be his own. God's gifts and callings are not in vain,
nor will they fail. Israel is the elect nation of God—to be the
blesser nation of earth. But this does not mean an individual
election. No indeed. Each individual Israelite will have to
demonstrate his worthiness to be a part Of this "holy nation." So
may every Israelite settle it now, settle it forever, his place is
with his God. There is his hope, his life, his eternity. His is the
promise of a new and better covenant that will bring the ultimate
blessing - even life evermore under the light of God's
countenance.