Category: Middle East

  • What does “blessing Israel” actually mean?

    What does “blessing Israel” actually mean?

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    I just completed my third trip to Israel in the past six months.  Where ever I have gone during these trips, and the many I have made in the previous 44 years, I hear people say, “I am here to bless Israel!”  If they get a chance to explain what they mean, the most common answer is, “ God says that those who bless Israel will be blessed and those who curse Israel will be cursed,” and they often know that it has something to do with God’s promise to Abraham.  In other words, this is some way of being sure that God will bless me.  Is that right?

    Others will apply this way of thinking more broadly and find direct connections with the well-being or decline of entire nations.  In one interpretation, this means that the nations that vote with Israel in the UN will thrive and the nations that vote against Israel will experience hardship and disaster.  (By the way, there is no doubt that the United Nations has some sort of obsession with condemning Israel.  In light of all the abuses of human rights by so many nations, the General Assembly spends an inordinate amount of time accusing Israel.)

    On this particular trip, I was part of the leadership of a large event in Jerusalem. There were about 3,500 people from many nations with nearly half of them being Chinese who have a passion for Jews and Arabs.  It was an amazing few days of worship, prayer and unity between nations and peoples and that included Jews and Arabs.  In fact believers from both backgrounds joyfully made a public covenant to walk together as “one new man”, as Paul describes in Ephesians 2:15.  However, when various individuals and delegations spoke about “blessing Israel”, I think they often did not mean the same thing as others; there were important misunderstandings associated with that phrase.

    There is a simple question that can help clear up the misunderstanding.   Do we mean we intend to bless the nation-state of Israel, or do we mean we intend to bless the people who have historically been known as Israel?  There is a big difference.

    The nation-state of Israel is, like all other nations, a mix of good and bad.  There is no doubt that God intended its resurrection in 1948 and that its birth and survival until today has been nothing short of Providential.  The scriptures make it clear that God ordains the nations and their boundaries so, in that sense, every nation is ordained of God, but Israel is unique among the nations.  There has never been an occasion in history in which people were able to return to their historical home after 1900 years of exile.  That is simply, amazingly miraculous.

    That does not mean that Israel is a uniquely righteous nation, though.  Actually, it’s founding philosophies had much more to do with Eastern European Socialism from the 1930s and 40s than any desire to return to the God of the Bible.  In the past few decades, the number of religious Jews has grown dramatically, but they are mostly of the Orthodox and Ultra-Orthodox persuasions and, as such, they are fiercely opposed to anything to do with Jesus Christ.  From a political perspective, Israel is like any other nation with a whole range of ideologies and dozens of political parties.  They oppose one another on nearly every subject, sometimes violently.  So, which of them do we support if “blessing Israel” means political support?

    That subject is not so complicated if we just think about the Old Testament prophetic scriptures.  None of the prophets ever unconditionally supported the government and military of Israel.  They loved the nation but, because they loved it, had to speak against the godlessness, the idolatry and their trust in their own wealth and might.  When we read Jeremiah and the other prophets, it seems that only the false prophets offered unconditional support.

    So, we must bless what is good and upright in a nation, but never call evil good, as the false prophets did.  But that is exactly what we do when we offer unconditional support to a nation.  Of course that principle applies to any nation.  When “the church” of any nation aligns itself with the ambitions of its government and military it ends up strengthening the Principalities and Powers that drive nations to evil.

    Yet, I am convinced that God wants us to bless Israel because anyone who reads and understands the message of the New Testament will know that God is not finished with the people who are called Israel—the Jewish people.  In Romans, Paul writes about them being branches that have been broken off, temporarily, from an olive tree.  Then he describes the believers of all the other nations as branches that were grafted into the tree.  And then he says that the breaking off was a blessing to all the other nations, but they will be grafted back in and that will be a MUCH greater blessing.

    So, that is not really complicated:  We maintain a prophetic stance to any and every nation and that includes the nation-state of Israel.  We simply cannot offer unconditional support because we would end up calling evil good.  Jeremiah and other prophets lost their lives because they refused to do exactly that.  But we can pray for and bless the Jewish people.  That means we long for the day when they will see their hope for a Messiah fulfilled in Jesus Christ.  We also work toward that end by supporting mission to the Jewish people and take every opportunity to extend love and kindness to them.

    If that is clear, let me make one more thing completely clear:  I BLESS ISRAEL!

  • Jewish & Arab Believers: A Marriage Made In Heaven

    Jewish & Arab Believers: A Marriage Made In Heaven

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    Just a few days ago I was rushing around the corridors of the back stage area of the International Conference Centre in Jerusalem looking for a man named Asher, telling myself not to worry and muttering urgent prayers.  Out front in the main theatre and the overflow hall were about 3,500 people from scores of nations and this was the session where we were going to hear from the Jewish and Arab leaders.  Asher was the spokesman for the Jewish leaders and was nowhere to be found.

    My expectations for this session were very high because of what had happened a month earlier in a retreat centre a few miles away.  But, without Asher we couldn’t publicly declare what a massive breakthrough had occurred those few weeks previously.  “Had his courage deserted him?” I wondered. I thought he had been looking pretty nervous when I saw him in the preparation room a half hour earlier.

    I began asking the sound engineers, video technicians, singers, dancers and stage hands if they had seen Asher and gradually concluded that he had suddenly begun to feel very unwell and left.  “So,” I told myself, “perhaps the look I had seen on his face earlier was not nerves, but nausea.”

    I was one of the leadership team for this event and we had met for two preparation meetings in Israel, one in May and another in September.  At the first one we saw Arab and Jewish congregation leaders draw near to one another, but during the second one I saw and heard things that I never really thought I would see.

    It began with one of the older and highly respected leaders of the Arab Christians.  He stood in front of the 70 leaders gathered from many nations and began to speak in great humility about how God had been dealing with him.  He said it reminded him of when he was in pre-marital counselling, except that he felt like this time he was preparing to be the bride.  Then he turned to the Jewish (Messianic) Congregation leaders and said, “God has been dealing with me about submission and respect and I have to ask you a question.  I have been talking with the other Arab leaders and we want to ask, ‘Will you marry us?’”

    All of us began to weep and the Chinese leaders travailed in prayer.  (They had been carrying this issue of unity between Arabs and Jews as a prayer burden for years, or even decades.)  After many tears, Asher stepped forward to speak for the Messianic leaders and asked for forgiveness for not protecting the Arab leaders and for assuming racial superiority.  As this unfolded over an hour or so, I had feelings I struggle to describe because I have been in and around meetings of reconciliation between Arabs and Jews for decades, but I had never seen anything that came close to being this deep.  This could happen only by revelation from the Holy Spirit.  I was convinced that the very deepest roots of distrust between these believers in Israel were being pulled up and destroyed by humility and forgiveness.

    But why is this so important? Jesus said that all men would know that we are his followers when we have deep, unshakable love for one another.  When there are divisions within the Body of Christ, we lose credibility in the eyes of the general population, but more importantly, we lose our spiritual authority to be ambassadors of the Kingdom of God.  Real and deep unity between Arab and Jewish believers is therefore very important to God’s purposes.

    That’s why I was so concerned that Asher had gone missing.  Eventually, I went back into the main theatre and found that worship was continuing and there was a very strong sense of God’s presence.  The Arab and Jewish leaders did share some of their experiences of living as believers in the land of Israel where faith in Jesus is still despised by most of the population.  It was all very good and it completely filled the time available for that session, but I still wondered, “Would we see a public declaration of what had happened those few weeks earlier?”

    The next morning Asher was back and in good form and so were all the other Messianic leaders and the Arab congregation leaders.  I don’t mean to imply that all the leaders in the land were there, because they weren’t.  But those who were there were senior spokesmen for each of these two groups and were, therefore, representative of the believers.

    The time had come. Arab and Jewish leaders were joined by many Chinese on the platform, along with leaders of several other nations.  Then, in the presence of thousands, both in the Conference Centre and via webcast, the “two became one” as Paul wrote to the Christians in Ephesians.  Jews and Arabs made a covenant based upon Ruth’s declaration to Naomi, “Your people will be my people and your God will be my God.”

    So, you might ask, “What will be the outcome of this?”   All I can say is that the believers in Israel will have more authority, more of God’s Presence with them, more impact on the nation around them.  For the specifics of that, we will have to wait and see, but Marti and I returned home knowing that we had witnessed an occasion of great significance and it had been a privilege!

    Click here for the full report: JERUSALEM REPORT FULL

  • Reconciliation Walk: The Inside Story

    Reconciliation Walk: The Inside Story

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    The “Reconciliation Walk” was one of the greatest adventures of my life and I love telling the story. Here it is in three twenty minute segments…