The Church and the Israel State

It is also good to discover a perspective, in this case a perspective from the USA, that you had never fully used in order to make critical sense of a series of events, of casual historical assumptions, of the power of myth and self deception and of what I see as a descent into inhumanity: so many clever people, so much intellectual effort and scholarship and so much dedication to a cause that believed it had the right to displace an indigenous people, rob them of their rights, houses, land, liberty and lives.

Who are the People of God?

Replacement Theory

God's promises were made to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob as believers and they were the spiritual food and property of none but believers (Rom 4:13,16) (Pink, "The Divine Covenant")

Rom 9:6-8 6 But it is not that the word of God has taken no effect. For they are not all Israel who are of Israel, 7 nor are they all children because they are the seed of Abraham; but, “In Isaac your seed shall be called.” 8 That is, those who are the children of the flesh, these are not the children of God; but the children of the promise are counted as the seed.

The Bible does not teach that we should be partial to Israel in the present Christ-rejecting rebellion against God, they can not claim a divine right to the land of Israel in spite of their rebellion and unbelief against their Maker and their covenant God.

“A people in treason against her King cannot lay legitimate claim on the King’s promises to a covenant-keeping people.”

Under Construction

Understanding Yad L’Achim, and Harassment of Christians in Israel

You wont' find it in Zionist talking points, but Israel has always mistreated Christians in the Holy Land. But by all accounts, it's getting worse.

At the center of Israel’s anti-missionary effort sits Yad L’Achim, “The Hand of the Brothers,” a well-funded, well-connected organization whose explicit mission is to stop Jews from converting to Christianity and to suppress Christian evangelism aimed at them. It does not operate in defiance of the Israeli state, but in harmony with its assumptions, laws, and enforcement culture.

By monitoring missionaries, pressuring landlords and municipalities, filing police complaints, mobilizing public outrage - and occasionally planting bombs you don’t read about in American papers - Yad L’Achim activates a legal and social system already predisposed against Christian witness. Evangelicals abroad continue to fund, defend, and advocate for Israel under the belief that loyalty earns goodwill, while a dedicated enforcement arm works openly to ensure Christianity never gains traction on the ground.