Israel – 60 years on

In 2008, the
nation of Israel marks 60 years since its foundation. Controversial
years, and at times violent ones. The nation is at the centre of
perhaps the modern world’s most intractable political problem, with
the Israel – Palestine issue widely seen as the root cause of much
of the terrorism and unrest that world leaders try in vain to deal
with.
Yet at the same
time, the land called Israel has a special meaning to millions of
followers of the world’s monotheistic faiths – Christians, Muslims
and Jews. The Holy Land; the land of Abraham, of Jesus; a land of
passion, of faith, of hope, of bloodshed.
What is it about
this land, and the people who claim it as their own, that makes
both so special? Why do history and politics, in a real sense, seem
to revolve around this small nation?
To find out, we
need to step back through time…
Israel 60 years
on:
Ancient mists of time
The story begins
somewhere between 3500 and 4000 years ago, with Abraham, or
Ibrahim, honoured by Christians, Jews and Muslims alike. Once
thought by some to be legendary, Abraham has become an increasingly
believable figure as archaeology has revealed more about the
sophisticated, civilised society in Mesopotamia – the ancient
Middle East – from which he is said to have emerged, and to have
migrated to Palestine at the call of the one
God.
It's with
Abraham that the Old Testament story of faith begins in earnest.
The account describes how God made Himself known to Abraham,
rewarding trust with a series of promises that looked forward to
the far distant future. The book of Genesis claims to record the
words of the first such promise:
"I will make
you into a great nation and I will bless you; I will make your name
great, and you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless
you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth
will be blessed through you."
(Genesis ch. 12 verses 2,3)
The fortunes of
peoples and powers throughout the ages to depend on how they
treated Abraham and his descendants? Sounds a little presumptuous
and far-fetched – until you look at history, and see how uncannily
true the words of Genesis have proved to be, time after time after
time….
Later promises
go on to foresee a special relationship between God and Abraham’s
descendants, a relationship that would last forever. Abraham’s
descendants were to be given the land that Genesis calls Canaan –
the land of Palestine: Israel. The land, God told Abraham, was to
be theirs “as an everlasting possession to you and your descendants
after you.” And through one of these descendants, the promises
reiterated, blessing would come to all
nations.
None of the
promises guaranteed that Abraham’s descendants – Israel, taking the
name of Abraham’s grandson - would remain loyal to God throughout
their history. Far from it: they strayed far from the faith of
Abraham, as other Old Testament writings anticipated they would.
But the reliability of God’s words was not to depend on Israel’s
faithfulness: instead, the promises were to be irrevocable, their
accuracy and fulfilment the proof that God is in control of the
ultimate destiny of people and nations.
Savage
antiquity
Ancient history
is by turns inspiring and barbaric. Supported by extensive
archaeological evidence, it records the occupation of the land of
Palestine by ancient Israel, their attack and often defeat by a
succession of regional superpowers – Egyptians, Assyrians,
Babylonians, Persians - their exile from their homeland in the
sixth century BC and their later partial return, only to be brought
into subjection first to Greek and then to Roman rulers, and
eventually dispersed throughout the world.
Over several
hundred years the Hebrew prophets called, often in vain, for their
people to come back to faith in and obedience to their God and His
laws, warning them of the oppression, dispersion and suffering to
which their own foolish choices would lead them. Like a parent,
their God yearned for His children’s love and loyalty – unable to
force them to love Him; grieved when they instead abused their
freedom; yet never giving up on them, for His concern for them was
irrevocable. However far they strayed, proclaimed the prophets, God
in the distant future would bring their descendants back to their
own land – and in doing so, prove to the world His supremacy over
men and nations.
“I will bring
them out from the nations and gather them from the countries, and I
will bring them into their own land. I will pasture them on the
mountains of Israel, in the ravines and in all the settlements in
the land.”
Ezekiel ch. 34, verse 13
“When I have
brought them back from the nations and have gathered them from the
countries of their enemies, I will show myself holy through them in
the sight of many nations.”
Ezekiel ch. 39, verse 27
Compared to the
great powers of the ancient world, Israel – the Jewish people -
were never more than minor players in international politics. Yet
remarkably, it was the Jewish people that survived, their identity
intact, while Assyria, Babylon and the rest vanished from the
scene, buried often literally in the shifting sands of time - so
completely that for a period, some questioned whether there had
ever been such a place as Babylon.
It was to a land
occupied by Rome and its puppet rulers that, some 2000 years ago,
Jesus of Nazareth came. In an obscure corner of the empire, over a
few short years, one man’s life and teaching changed the world. And
Jesus was a Jew – his identity as the long-awaited fulfilment of
Old Testament predictions stressed in his own words and highlighted
repeatedly by the Gospel chroniclers. Moreover, Jesus underlined
the promises about the Jewish people – directing his hearers’
attention to the Hebrew prophets, and asserting that the Jewish
people would continue, visible to the world, until God’s purposes
with the earth were fulfilled.
Long
ages of exile
Rome too
persecuted the Jews. In revenge for a rebellion some 40 years after
Jesus’ ministry, their legions ravaged the land, expelled its
people and looted the treasures of the Jewish faith. Roman
monuments and relics record their triumph and the poignant
suffering of the defeated Jews.
Yet Rome too, in
time, met its downfall, while for close on two millennia, the
people of Israel were exiled. Scattered throughout the world,
expelled from country after country to take refuge in others, they
struggled against oppression and persecution – sadly often at the
hands of the very Christians who should have seen in the Jews the
foundations of their own faith.
To any rational
observer, the expectation would have been for the gradual
assimilation of Jews among the various peoples and races among
which they were scattered. After all, who could identify Picts,
Goths, or for that matter Romans today as distinct, cohesive
peoples? Yet a nation the Jews remained - continuing, in exile and
in hope, to maintain their distinct identity - despite rampant
anti-semitism, often sponsored by supposedly Christian
rulers.
Prejudice and
hatred continued into relatively recent times, with organized
massacres - pogroms –– in Russia and elsewhere among the most
extreme examples. In the nineteenth century, some Jewish
visionaries began to work for a solution to their age-old problem
of dispersion throughout the world and persecution by so many. Most
prominent among them was Austrian journalist Theodor Herzl, whose
book ‘The Jewish State’ called for the re-creation of a physical,
political nation of Israel – in its historic, Biblical homeland,
then part of the ramshackle Ottoman (Turkish) Empire. Under Herzl’s
leadership the movement gathered momentum, while pioneering parties
of Jewish settlers acquired land in Palestine and formed
communities there, scraping a living from the
land.


Aliyah
The First World
War proved a watershed. Britain captured Palestine from the Turks,
and the government under Lloyd George had reason to be grateful to
Jewish scientist Chaim Weizmann who had developed a new method of
making the scarce chemical acetone for the munitions industry. The
Government issued a statement of support for “the establishment in
Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people” – the famous
Balfour Declaration – though Britain’s support was less unequivocal
than it sounds, as it was making contradictory promises to the
Arabs and the French at about the same
time.
Nevertheless,
Britain took charge of Palestine, under a Jewish High Commissioner,
Sir Herbert Samuel – the first Jewish ruler in the land since New
Testament times – and for a period, Jewish immigration was
welcomed. Yet the opportunity didn’t last long, and many Jews were
slow to take advantage of it. Within a few years, Arab opposition
led to restrictions on immigration, and by the time the storm
clouds of war gathered over Europe, the doors were closing. As the
full horror of Nazi Germany became apparent, Jewish refugees tried
to flee – only to find ‘free’ countries, to their abiding shame,
turning them away. Many were returned to their
deaths.
The appalling
story of the Holocaust needs no repetition here. While the Nazis
murdered Jews in their millions, Palestine itself escaped German
invasion as the British halted Rommel’s advance at El Alamein –
mercifully, since the Palestinian Arab leader and Nazi ally, Haj
Amin al-Husseini, in exile in Berlin, hoped Hitler would provide “a
solution to the Jewish problem in Palestine and the Arab countries,
according to the same methods by which the problem was solved in
Nazi Germany”.
But the promises
of God are unbreakable. From the ruins of World War II emerged a
remnant of the Jewish people – and, at last, international
agreement to create that ‘national home in
Palestine’
The
Exodus – a ship used by Zionists to try to bring Jewish immigrants
to Israel in 1947; the British refusal to let it land caused great
controversy
Crusader
state or chosen people?

On May 14, 1948,
Jewish leader David Ben-Gurion proclaimed the creation of the State
of Israel. The new, old nation started with high aspirations, but
in great danger. Attacked immediately by the armies of surrounding
Arab countries, massively outnumbering the embryonic state, Israel
was expected by many to be wiped out at birth.
Yet the promises
of God and the words of the prophets said otherwise. After a short,
intense war, Israel was left with more, not less, territory than it
had expected. And over time, that territory itself began to fulfil
the words of the prophet Ezekiel:
“You, O
mountains of Israel, will produce branches and fruit for my people
Israel… I am concerned for you and will look on you with favour;
you will be ploughed and sown, …. I will call for the grain and
make it plentiful and will not bring famine upon you. I will
increase the fruit of the trees and the crops of the field… The
desolate land will be cultivated instead of lying desolate in the
sight of all who pass through it. They will say, "This land that
was laid waste has become like the garden of Eden….”
Ezekiel ch. 36, verses 8, 9, 29, 30, 34,
35
The opposition
didn’t stop, of course. Two decades later another, even shorter war
saw Israel win control of perhaps the most significant patch of
land of all – the Old City of Jerusalem, calling to mind the words
of Jesus:
“Jerusalem
will be trampled on by the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles
are fulfilled.”
Luke ch 21, verse 24
The aftermath of
the 1967 war led to four decades of strife between Israel and the
Palestinians, with the city of Jerusalem a particular international
bone of contention. Or rather, “an immovable
rock for all the nations” – the words of the
Old Testament prophet Zechariah, 2500 years old and uncannily
accurate…..
Some may
question how far Israel has honoured its Declaration of
Independence commitment to “freedom, justice and peace as envisaged
by the prophets of Israel”, and it certainly can’t be claimed that
its people are all actively loyal to the faith of Abraham. Nor does
Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians remotely match up to the Old
Testament commands:
“When
foreigners reside among you in your land, do not mistreat them. The
foreigners residing among you must be treated as your native-born.
Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt.”
Leviticus ch. 19, verses 33-34
“Do not
oppress a foreigner; you yourselves know how it feels to be
foreigners, because you were foreigners in Egypt.”
Exodus ch. 23, verse 9
But the fact
remains that against all the odds, despite the worst that human
wickedness could throw at them, the Jewish people have survived.
The Biblical promises, of regathering to their historic homeland
and of the restoration to productive fertility, have come
true.
Over
the horizon
The story of
Israel is a story of survival, hope and restoration against,
humanly speaking, impossible odds. It isn’t a story that shows the
people of Israel, the Jewish people, always to be in the right, nor
does it imply support for everything the modern country of Israel
is or does. But it is a story with a
meaning.
To many, it
seems incredible to claim that the Bible is infinitely more than a
collection of ancient myths – that its promises are 100% reliable,
that there really is a God who is in control of the destiny of the
world and all of us, that there really was and is a Man who in the
light of a spring morning, 2000 years ago, walked out of his grave:
that Jesus really will reappear physically as King.
To believe all
this, you’d want solid evidence. The story of Israel is nothing
less than a key part of that evidence. More than three thousand
years of solid evidence - God’s ‘visual aid’, through
history.
Look at it
again. Nation after nation, superpower after superpower, that has
persecuted the Jews has come to ruin. Assyria, Babylon, Rome,
Tsarist Russia, Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union – all falling victim
to the words of Genesis, echoing down the
centuries:
I will bless
those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all
peoples on earth will be blessed through
you."
Meanwhile, the
Jewish people have survived, despite appalling persecution, as the
Bible said they would. Returned to their own land, as the Bible
said they would. Defeated their enemies, as the Bible said they
would. Made the land fertile again, as the Bible said they would -
the satellite image on this page is a picture of the Bible coming
true.

Satellite image
of Israel and surrounding area. Heavier vegetation on the irrigated
land on the Israeli side causes the political border between Israel
and Egyptian Sinai to become visible
Solid evidence
that you can trust the Bible, and believe the God who caused it to
be written.
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