Coming home to God
26 March 2021
A weekly reflection on current global affairs concerning Israel and
the Jewish people from a Biblical perspective.
Tomorrow, 27th March 2021, is the beginning of Pesach: the season in which the Jewish people remember that the Lord brought them out of slavery in Egypt. He led them by the hand, through the desert. He gave them the law. He taught them to rely on Him, and led them into the land He had promised to Abraham.
Later, the Jewish people were sent into exile, in Assyria and Babylon, because they did not obey the Lord. But God in His mercy promised to bring them back, in the last days. And that is exactly what He is doing today: bringing them home from the north, south, east and west, and planting them in the land.
Why? In order that His name will be made holy in the midst of the nations of the earth. Israel is called to be a light to the nations.
‘So you will be my people, and I will be your God.’
Israel is in crisis. The elections this week have failed to produce a clear winner. Worse, it is impossible, humanly speaking, to see how so many widely diverging parties will ever be able to cobble together a stable coalition whose interests sufficiently align and who are willing to work together.
The fourth elections in two years has only made the divisions in Israeli society appear deeper, and the electoral system weaker, than ever.
It is important to remember that Israel, in this sense, is no different from other countries. In The Netherlands, for example, the elections last week have also resulted in a very splintered political landscape, with no clear coalition of parties. Worldwide, we see nations suffering from moral decay, political instability and social unrest.
It all seems to point towards the truth that the Prophets of Israel foretold millennia ago:
“My God will reject them because they have not obeyed him; they will be wanderers among the nations” (Hosea 9:17).
What is true of Israel is true of all nations: unless and until our leaders turn towards God, we will never be settled, we will never experience true peace and security.
In the coming days, as the Jewish people are celebrating Pesach, let us pray that the leaders of Israel – Jews and Arabs, religious and non-religious - put aside their differences. May they seek their wisdom, strength and unity not in man-made schemes or philosophies, but in serving the Lord G-d who created Israel, is bringing her home, and promised to be her Redeemer – as a light to the nations.
The Editorial team
Israel & Christians Today
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