Friday, December 26, 2025

Israeli Foreign Minister Tells Jews of the World to Come Home to Israel

God uses pressure on Jews to get them to move.  And as the pressure builds of antisemitism in every land, including USA, the Jews will start to realize that the only place they feel at home will be Israel.  Of course this is a fulfillment of prophecy.  The world has never seen anything like it!  For 2000 years Jews scattered all over.  No Israel, no Promised Land, no Jerusalem, no Temple.

But that all changed and it will change even more in the coming weeks and months as we watch prophecy roll our right in front of our eyes.

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Against the backdrop of rising antisemitism, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar is calling on Jews from a number of countries to make “Aliyah” (immigrate to Israel).

“We stand for the right of every Jew to live in security anywhere. But today, I am calling on Jews in the United Kingdom, Australia, France, Canada, and Belgium to immigrate to Israel,” Sa’ar told participants at the “J-50” Forum.

Sa’ar founded the forum in May to create a direct, ongoing dialogue with Jewish community leaders worldwide.  It provides them with briefings, public diplomacy tools, and a platform to address rising antisemitism.

Sa’ar continued, “I want you to know that I will continue to make this call. We have learned lessons from our history. I believe it is my duty to do so and to enable Jews to raise their children in a non-hostile environment, in their true home: the Land of Israel.”

Danielle Mor, vice president of Israel Allies and Global Philanthropy at the Jewish Agency, which processes those who make Aliyah, says there are eight million Jewish people in the world who are eligible to make Aliyah.

The Chairman of the Jewish Agency is hoping and planning for one million Jewish people to make Aliyah in the next five years, Mor told CBN News recently.  And while that’s the case, Aliyah usually takes some time.

Mor explained that there are things the “push” people to make Aliyah, such as the state of the economy, safety concerns, the election of New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, and growing antisemitism.  She added that some of it depends on how much people are willing to tolerate changing patterns, such as not wearing a yarmulke and speaking about Jewish-related subjects in public.

On the other hand, there are things that “pull” people to make Aliyah, including a sense of identity, an inner calling, and the need for a better life and safety, according to Mor.

Practically speaking, she said, they’ve seen an increase in applications and Aliyah from France.  From the US, they’ve seen increased interest and opening Aliyah files, but only a small to moderate increase in actual Aliyah.

 https://cbn.com/news/israel/israeli-foreign-minister-calls-jews-around-world-immigrate-israel

US Launches Strikes on Nigeria’s Muslim’s for Killing Christians

 As we all know, the media in America doesn’t care one lick if Christians are targeted and murdered by Muslims.  It doesn’t rise to their level of “newsworthy” because it doesn’t meet the parameters of their worldview which divides the world up into two groups;  oppressed and oppressors.  Here in the US they believe the Muslims living here are oppressed by mostly white Christian nationalists who don’t believe in religious freedom for all.  In Israel the poor Muslims of Palestine are oppressed by their Jewish overlords, says their worldview.  So when a Muslim dies at the hands of a Jew, that makes headlines everywhere.  When Trump says Muslims shouldn’t be allowed to walk into America unchecked and unvetted the media screams about Islamophobia.  But when Muslims go after Christians all over the rest of the world, the woke-left will ignore it.  Consequently most Americans have no clue of the misery and terror being laid on our Christian brothers and sisters living in Nigeria.  And now, because of Trump ordering the bombing of ISIS in Nigeria on Christmas Day, maybe the American media will be forced to report on the topic.

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The United States carried out a targeted military strike against Islamic State terrorists in northwest Nigeria on Christmas Day, acting in coordination with Nigerian authorities, U.S. President Donald Trump announced in a series of social media posts.

According to U.S. Africa Command, the strike was conducted in the Sokoto region and resulted in the deaths of multiple Islamic State militants. The operation was launched in response to what Nigerian officials described as a “persistent threat of terrorism and violent extremism” posed by ISIS-linked groups operating in the country.

Trump said the strikes were ordered to halt the ongoing targeting of Christian civilians, warning that the United States would not stand by amid what he described as escalating violence against believers. In a post on Truth Social, the president said the U.S. had launched “powerful and deadly” strikes against ISIS militants who have been “viciously killing, primarily, innocent Christians.”

The U.S. Defense Department later released declassified footage showing at least one projectile launched from a U.S. warship as part of the operation. Pentagon officials confirmed that Nigeria’s government approved the strikes and worked closely with U.S. forces in planning and execution.

Nigeria’s Foreign Ministry said it would continue working with the United States and international partners to weaken terrorist networks, disrupt financing and logistics, and prevent cross-border threats. Nigerian President Bola Tinubu, in a Christmas statement earlier this week, reaffirmed his commitment to protecting religious freedom for all Nigerians.

“No one, regardless of ethnicity or belief, should be made to suffer for professing or practicing his faith,” Tinubu said.

The strike follows a series of high-profile attacks on Christians in Nigeria linked to Islamic State affiliates and other extremist groups. In mid-December, gunmen abducted at least 13 worshippers during a church attack in Kogi State. In November, more than 300 schoolchildren were kidnapped from a Catholic school, an incident that drew international condemnation. All of the children were later released after weeks in captivity.

U.S. officials say violence against Christians has intensified in northern Nigeria over the past decade as Islamist groups, including Boko Haram and ISIS affiliates, wage an insurgency against the secular government. Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation with roughly 237 million people, is nearly evenly divided between Muslims and Christians, with Christians concentrated largely in the south and central regions.

Last month, Trump reinstated Nigeria’s designation as a “country of particular concern” for religious freedom violations, responding to pressure from U.S. Christian leaders and advocacy groups. While some activists have labeled the violence a “Christian genocide,” Nigerian officials maintain the conflict is complex, involving ethnic tensions, criminal gangs, and extremist ideology.

Still, Trump warned that further attacks on Christian civilians would prompt additional U.S. action, saying the United States would not allow radical Islamic terrorism to prosper. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth echoed that stance, writing that the president has been clear the killing of innocent Christians “must end.”

https://harbingersdaily.com/us-launches-christmas-day-strike-on-isis-targets-in-nigeria-amid-rising-attacks-on-christians/

Thursday, December 25, 2025

A Passage For Christmas

 In my previous post today we mentioned how people create their own Jesus in their brains.  To many he is just a baby born to show us a “good” way to live.  But to true followers we know he was born to die and he will come again to snatch His bride from the coming wrath of God poured out on the entire earth during the Great Tribulation.

After that Jesus will return and crush the unbelievers who survived.

In my Bible reading plan this passage from Zephaniah always falls on Christmas Day.  Coincidence?

The great day of the Lord is near—
    near and coming quickly.
The cry on the day of the Lord is bitter;
    the Mighty Warrior shouts his battle cry.
15 That day will be a day of wrath—
    a day of distress and anguish,
        a day of trouble and ruin,
    a day of darkness and gloom,
        a day of clouds and blackness—
16     a day of trumpet and battle cry
against the fortified cities
    and against the corner towers.

17 “I will bring such distress on all people
    that they will grope about like those who are blind,
    because they have sinned against the Lord.
Their blood will be poured out like dust
    and their entrails like dung.
18 Neither their silver nor their gold
    will be able to save them
    on the day of the Lord’s wrath.”


The Returning Jesus is a Warrior King, Not a Baby in Bethlehem

Merry Christmas to all my readers everywhere.  What an immeasurable blessing it is to know that Jesus is in control of all things and He is coming back for us soon!  This worldview, unlike any other, is the reason that we can have THE JOY OF THE LORD no matter how crazy the world headlines look.

Yes, prophecy said a baby would be born in Bethlehem and that happened.  But prophecy also tells us, in Revelation 19, that Jesus is coming back to this world at Armageddon and will crush all his enemies.  After that, he will set up a kingdom in Jerusalem and rule and reign from there.  No wonder the world seems focused on Jerusalem.

Enjoy the article below and ask yourselves, “what Jesus do I picture when I talk to him and think about him?”

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Should you be one of the increasingly few who still remember what the real “reason for the season” is this Christmas, then you can’t help but think about Jesus. How, though, in your mind’s eye, do you actually picture Him?

The Christmas Jesus

Because the Christmas holiday celebrates the Savior’s birth, when picturing Jesus, one naturally sees a baby. Popular nativity scenes portray Luke’s description of Jesus as a tiny babe swaddled in strips of cloth and lying in an animal trough. His parents, Mary and Joseph, gaze down adoringly. Shepherds and wise men gape in amazement from their perches along stone walls. The heavenly host flies above majestically singing, “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, goodwill toward men!”

While the angels add a sense of the divine to the Nativity Story, and Hollywood adds the touch of a beam of Bethlehem starlight spotlighting the little family, for the most part, the scene is rather pastoral. We see a peasant family sitting in the hay among the barnyard animals in some sort of cave. It is meant to be a very humble scene.

The Easter Jesus

Because Christmastime is also celebrated by cultural Christians and even non-Christians, the humble imagery of the baby Jesus remains in the mind’s eye. That is, until Easter. Then Jesus is portrayed altogether differently. Now He’s all grown up, fully bearded, yet frail and emaciated. His lithe body suffers from beatings and is covered in lash marks. He is nailed naked to a tree where he hangs limply, bleeding. And there Jesus remains on that cross in the mind’s eye, at least until Christmas returns to reset the mental image of Jesus back into a tiny baby again. And the circle continues.

The Popular Jesus

One of the most popular scenes from the movie Talladega Nights is when the lead character, race car driver Ricky Bobby (played by Will Ferrell), says grace with his family over a feast of fast food. He begins each praise and prayer request with “Dear Lord Baby Jesus” until his wife, Carley, impatiently interrupts with a, “Hey, you know, Sweetie, Jesus did grow up. You don’t always have to call him ‘baby.’” Incensed, Ricky responds with, “Well, I like the Christmas Jesus best, and I’m saying grace. When you say grace, you can say it to grown-up Jesus, or teenage Jesus, or bearded Jesus, or whoever you want.” Even Ricky’s father-in-law, Chip, chimes in with, “He was a man! He had a beard!” From there, the conversation degenerates as each family member describes the “Jesus” they prefer: a ninja fighting off evil samurai, a guy sporting giant eagle’s wings, or a cool fellow singing lead vocals in a band, and so on.

Christians watching this movie tend to squirm, dumbfounded over whether this scene balances closer to blasphemy or comedy. And yet, one cannot help but come away with a profound revelation: most people have created their own “Jesus.”

People see Jesus in the only way they’ve ever encountered Him, and often that’s only during Christmas and Easter. Therefore, Jesus remains to most people as either a helpless baby or a dying man.

The Prophetic Jesus

The beauty and majesty of God’s Prophetic Word introduce us to a third image of Jesus that few, if any, encounter because they never study Bible prophecy. In the prophecies concerning Jesus’ Second Coming, human frailty is stripped away, revealing Christ’s true glory—a divinity that the Apostles could only glimpse at the Transfiguration. Christ’s true form stunned James and John into silence and Peter into babbling. The Apostles had witnessed Jesus in His eternal, glorified state!

In Revelation 1:8, Jesus introduces Himself with the self-identification, “I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End… the Almighty,” breaking out of the box of babyhood with His claim to agelessness and ultimate power. Revelation 1 continues to describe Jesus as “One like the Son of Man,” so only resembling frail humanity in appearance. Clothed with a garment and girded with a golden band, His hair gleams bright white as wool, and His eyes blaze like flames. Jesus’ feet glow like brass refined in a furnace, and His voice thunders with the sound of many waters. Jesus’ holiness blinds with the strength of the sun. The Jesus whom the elderly apostle John encountered caused him to fall at Jesus’ feet, as if he were a dead man.

Jump ahead to Revelation 19, and you’ll stand in awe of the description of Jesus as He triumphantly returns to earth as a warrior king, dispensing righteousness, judgment, and waging total war against Satan’s forces. Jesus bursts out of the heavens riding His white war charger as the armies of Heaven trail endlessly behind Him. Jesus’ eyes blaze like fire, atop His head sit many crowns, His robe is dipped in blood, and He strikes the enemy nations dead with the sword of the Word protruding out of His mouth. Emblazoned on Jesus’ thigh is the title: “King of kings and Lord of lords.”

Often, it is more palatable to paint Jesus inside the box of one’s mind as a little baby or suffering servant, but is that the genuine Jesus? In part, yes, for they were as much a part of Jesus as our own baby, childhood, and teenage selves once were to us then, but are no longer.

Jesus eternal is the Jesus of Bible prophecy. So stand in awe of your Savior this Christmas season, and all year long!

 https://harbingersdaily.com/the-jesus-of-bible-prophecy-christ-is-no-longer-a-little-baby-or-suffering-servant/

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Jews Are Coming Home to Israel in Unbelief

 What you believe about Israel and Jews is not a salvation issue.  But we just don’t understand HOW folks can study the Bible and NOT see the miraculous prophecy being done through Israel and the Jews…exactly as God said would happen in the very Last Days.

Please read and study what this author has laid out for us.

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Scripture told us to expect a Jewish return to the land before a national turning to Messiah. That “return in unbelief” can help evangelicals resist the new antisemitism, avoid romanticizing any government, and pray more biblically for Israel and her neighbors.

Not long ago, a secular Israeli friend tried to explain why, after building a successful life in North America, he was still thinking about going “back home” to Israel.

He is not religious. He is not part of a settler movement. He is weary of war and politics. Yet he told me, almost apologetically, “I don’t even know why. It’s like there’s a magnet. I just feel I belong there.”

That “magnet” is everything and nothing at once: family, Hebrew, history, trauma, culture — and, if Scripture is to be believed, the hand of God.

What makes his story so striking, especially for readers of ALL ISRAEL NEWS, is that the Jewish people are returning to their ancient land largely in unbelief. Most Israeli Jews today do not confess Yeshua as Messiah, and many are secular or loosely observant. And yet, after two thousand years of dispersion, they are home again — in roughly the same numbers as before the Holocaust, and on the same narrow strip of land the Bible calls Israel.

For many evangelicals who love Israel and follow the headlines — from the trauma of October 7 to the ongoing war of words and rockets — that combination of return and unbelief can feel confusing. For the prophets, it was expected.

This is not a glitch in God’s plan. It is part of the script.

A demographic miracle in the shadow of the Shoah

On the eve of the Holocaust in 1939, there were about 16.6 million Jews worldwide. The vast majority lived in Europe. Six years later, after the Nazi death machine and its collaborators did their work, only about 11 million remained. More than one-third of the entire Jewish people had been murdered.

Nearly eight decades on, the global Jewish population has only recently approached that pre-war peak. A 2023 analysis by the Jewish Agency for Israel and reporting in the Times of Israel estimate about 15.7 million Jews worldwide, with roughly 7.2 million living in Israel — about 46% of world Jewry.

Later updates show the trend continuing: On the eve of Rosh Hashanah 2024, the global Jewish population was estimated at 15.8 million, with about 7.3 million Jews in Israeland 6.3 million in the United States — again, roughly 46% of world Jewry in Israel.

In 1939, by contrast, only about 3% of the world’s Jews lived in what was then British Mandate Palestine — fewer than half a million people. Today, close to half live in the modern State of Israel. According to Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics, summarized by Israel’s official portal and outlets such as i24News, the country’s population recently stood at around 9.9 million, including over 7.4 million Jews.

Within a single lifetime, the Jewish people have gone from being a mostly European people, with a small foothold in the land of Israel, to being a people whose largest and most dynamic community is back in that land. Israel is now the demographic engine of the Jewish future.

No honest historian in 1939 — or even 1945 — would have predicted that outcome. Yet the Hebrew prophets, writing 2,500–2,700 years ago, described a future in which God would scatter Israel to the ends of the earth and then bring them home again.

The covenant that would not die

The story does not begin in 1948, but in Genesis 12, when God calls Abram to “go…to the land that I will show you,” promising to make him into a great nation, to bless those who bless him, and to curse those who curse him (Gen. 12:1–3). That promise is unilateral and unconditional: God binds Himself to it in a covenant ratified in Genesis 15 and reaffirmed in Genesis 17.

Israel’s continued existence and the Jewish people’s unique tie to the land are rooted in that covenant, not in a United Nations vote.

Centuries later, Moses warned that persistent rebellion would bring severe judgment, including exile:

“The LORD will scatter you among all peoples, from one end of the earth to the other…”
— Deuteronomy 28:64

But the same Moses also spoke of mercy after exile:

“…then the LORD your God will restore your fortunes and have mercy on you, and he will gather you again from all the peoples where the LORD your God has scattered you.”
— Deuteronomy 30:3

The God who scatters Israel in discipline also promises to regather them in grace. The scattering is real; so is the homecoming.

The prophets saw this second homecoming — and they saw unbelief

Isaiah takes Moses’ theme and looks far beyond the Babylonian exile. He foresees a future in which the Lord:

“will raise a signal for the nations
and will assemble the banished of Israel,
and gather the dispersed of Judah
from the four corners of the earth.”
— Isaiah 11:12

This is not simply the return from Babylon, which involved a relatively small number of exiles returning from a single empire. Isaiah speaks of a worldwide regathering “from the four corners of the earth,” tied closely to the Messianic reign of Isaiah 11:1–10.

Ezekiel develops the same theme in unforgettable images.

In Ezekiel 36, the Lord promises to bring Israel back to their land, to multiply the people, and to rebuild the ruined cities. Only after they are back in the land does He promise to sprinkle clean water on them, give them a new heart, and put His Spirit within them (Ezek. 36:24–27).

Then comes the valley of dry bones in Ezekiel 37. Ezekiel sees scattered bones come together, then sinews and flesh cover them. Only later does the breath (ruach) of life enter them so that they stand as a vast living army.

Jewish and Christian readers alike have long seen in this a two-stage restoration:

  1. A physical regathering of the Jewish people to their land while still in unbelief — bones and sinews, a national body without spiritual life.

  2. A spiritual renewal when God breathes His Spirit upon them and brings them to faith.

Look at modern Israel through that lens:

  • A people regathered from “the four corners of the earth,”

  • In a land long desolate and contested,

  • Speaking ancient Hebrew as a modern tongue,

  • Yet mostly secular or non-Messianic.

It looks suspiciously like the first stage Ezekiel described.

“Isn’t this just politics?”

At this point, some Christians object: “Aren’t you just reading modern headlines back into ancient prophecies? Isn’t the State of Israel just another modern nation-state, like Belgium or Brazil?”

We must be clear about two things at once.

First, yes, Israel is a modern state with a secular government, fallible leaders, and real sins. No Knesset coalition is above critique. The Bible never calls us to baptize every policy decision as the will of God.

Second, the combination of facts we now see cannot be shrugged off as coincidence:

  • A people preserved through two millennia of dispersion,

  • The Holocaust’s attempted extermination of European Jewry,

  • A return to the same land promised to Abraham and his descendants,

  • The rebirth of Hebrew as a spoken language,

  • And now, nearly half of world Jewry living in that land.

From a biblical perspective, that looks exactly like what Deuteronomy, Isaiah, and Ezekiel said God would do: scatter, preserve, regather.

Demographers such as Professor Sergio DellaPergola, whose work underlies releases by the Jewish Agency and coverage in Times of Israel, note that about 46% of the world’s Jews now live in Israel, with roughly 6.3 million in the United States.

Historically, it is astonishing; theologically, it is familiar.

Return in unbelief: not a problem, but a prophecy

Many believers stumble here. They assume that if Israel’s rebirth has any prophetic significance, then:

  • Israel’s leaders must be righteous,

  • Its policies must be just, and

  • Its people must already be walking closely with God.

But Scripture never says that.

In fact, the prophetic pattern runs the other way: first a return, then repentance.

  • In Deuteronomy 30, repentance and regathering are intertwined, but the text clearly envisions God acting in mercy toward a people who have already experienced the curse of exile.

  • In Ezekiel 36–37, God brings the people back to the land while they are still profaning His name among the nations, then sanctifies His name by transforming them.

  • In Zechariah 12:10, the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem are already in the land when God pours out “a spirit of grace and pleas for mercy,” leading them to look “on me, on him whom they have pierced” and to mourn.

The New Testament confirms the same pattern.

In Romans 9–11, Paul wrestles with Israel’s current unbelief and yet insists:

“For the gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable.”
— Romans 11:29

He describes a present partial hardening on Israel “until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in” (Rom. 11:25), and then looks forward to a future national turning to Messiah:

“And in this way all Israel will be saved.”
— Romans 11:26

Put together, Scripture expects a season in which:

  • Israel is back in the land,

  • Still largely in unbelief,

  • Under intense pressure,

  • Yet mysteriously preserved, until God opens their eyes.

That is the tension we feel when we meet a secular Israeli engineer, a skeptical Tel Aviv artist, or a deeply wounded Holocaust survivor in Haifa — physically home, spiritually far, and yet right at the center of God’s unfolding plan.

Antisemitism’s new mask

The prophetic picture is not only about Israel’s return; it is also about the nations’ rage.

In recent years, antisemitism has surged worldwide. In the United States alone, the Anti-Defamation League’s Audit of Antisemitic Incidents 2024 recorded 9,354 incidents of harassment, vandalism and assault — more than 25 per day, the highest level since tracking began in 1979 and part of an almost nine-fold rise over the past decade.

For the first time, a majority of those incidents were directly tied to anger at Israel and Zionism, with many campus and street protests sliding from legitimate criticism of Israeli policy into calls for Israel’s elimination and open praise for terror groups.

European and global monitoring bodies report similar spikes: Jewish schools and synagogues under threat, Jewish students harassed on campuses, “From the river to the sea” chanted in Western capitals as if the annihilation of Israel were a moral ideal.

ALL ISRAEL NEWS has chronicled these trends and the way anti-Zionism has become, in Greg Denham’s phrase, an “ideological virus infecting young Evangelicals: Why anti-Zionism is anti-Christ,” as support for Israel among 18–29-year-old evangelicals has plunged.

The prophets were not naïve about this. Psalm 83Ezekiel 38–39, and Zechariah 12all describe periods of intense hostility toward Israel, coupled with God’s determination to defend His people and vindicate His name through their deliverance.

We do not honor Scripture by forcing every headline into a specific prophecy chart. But we also do not honor Scripture by pretending that:

  • A still-wounded people,

  • Returning to a still-contested land,

  • Facing renewed hatred worldwide,

is some strange “accident” the Bible never anticipated.

Five ways this should shape us

So what should Bible-believing Christians — especially those who follow Israel news every day — do with all of this?

1. Reject replacement theology and cheap supersessionism

The New Testament never says, “God is finished with ethnic Israel.” Instead, Paul warns Gentile believers not to become arrogant toward the Jewish people:

“…remember it is not you who support the root, but the root that supports you.”
— Romans 11:18

Any theology that erases God’s promises to Abraham’s physical descendants contradicts Paul’s careful argument. We must not baptize every decision of the State of Israel as righteous — but neither may we pretend that the Jewish people have been written out of God’s story.

ALL ISRAEL NEWS has already run strong correctives to “erase & replace” theology and the new anti-Zionism inside the Church, such as “Why Israel still matters: The faithfulness of God in a modern miracle” and Greg Denham’s “Erase & replace: The lie of Replacement Theology — And the attempt to write Israel out of God’s plan.”

Your Bible, not the latest hashtag, must set your categories.

2. Keep the cross at the center, not politics

Dispensational or not, we must keep the gospel central.

The Jewish people, like all of us, need salvation in Yeshua the Messiah. If our love for Israel never moves us to pray for Jewish people to know Jesus, we have lost the plot.

At the same time, a “spiritualized” theology that ignores the very real return of the Jewish people to their land tears the New Testament loose from its Old Testament roots. The apostles wrote in a world where the promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob still mattered — and they still matter now.

3. Stand against antisemitism in every form

When antisemitism surges — from far-right extremists, far-left radicals, Islamist ideologues, or confused students — Christians should be the first to say “no.”

We do not have to endorse every decision of the Israeli government to insist that:

  • Jewish students be safe on our campuses,

  • Jewish institutions be protected, and

  • Jewish neighbors be treated with dignity as image-bearers of God.

A people who have not yet fully recovered demographically from the Holocaust should not have to wonder whether they are safe in New York, Paris, London, or Los Angeles.

4. Treat Jewish people as neighbors, not as props in our prophecy charts

The Jewish student in your classroom, the Israeli coworker on Zoom, the elderly Holocaust survivor down the street — these are not “signs of the times.” They are human beings, often carrying deep generational trauma.

Some are wary of Christians because of the Church’s long history of antisemitism. Listening well, loving well, and sharing Yeshua with humility honors both them and the God of Israel.

5. Let God’s faithfulness to Israel strengthen your faith

If God can preserve the Jewish people through Babylon, Rome, medieval persecutions, pogroms, the Shoah, October 7, and modern jihadist terror — and still bring them back to the same land after two thousand years — then He can keep His promises to you.

The God who keeps covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob is the same God who promises never to leave nor forsake those who are in Christ.

“Home in unbelief” — and the story is not finished

We should not romanticize Israel’s present condition.

The nation is deeply divided. Many young Israelis are secular or disillusioned. The trauma of October 7 and the ongoing conflict with Iran-backed terror groups have left painful moral and spiritual questions hanging over the society. Honest Christians can acknowledge genuine suffering and injustice on both sides of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.

But none of that negates the prophetic significance of the Jewish return. In many ways, it intensifies it.

The prophets told us to expect:

  • A people back in their land,

  • Still wrestling with sin and unbelief,

  • Still arguing with their God,

  • Yet irresistibly drawn home and preserved against all odds,

  • Awaiting a future outpouring of grace.

That is precisely what we are seeing.

The bones have come together. The sinews and flesh are there. The body is standing again on its feet in the land of promise. But the breath of spiritual life — that great turning to Messiah that Paul longs for in Romans 11 — is still ahead.

For now, the Jews have indeed come home in unbelief, exactly as the prophets said. For evangelicals who take the Bible seriously, that reality should not unsettle our faith. It should deepen our awe and sharpen our prayers.

We are living in a generation that gets to watch the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob keep His word on the evening news.

The right response is not speculation, but worship, repentance, and renewed urgency to proclaim the gospel “to the Jew first and also to the Greek” (Romans 1:16) — trusting that the One who brought Israel home in unbelief will, in His time, bring them all the way home to Himself.

https://allisraelnews.com/blog/jews-have-come-home-in-unbelief-exactly-as-the-prophets-said