Tuesday 7 June 2016

Going [Back?] to The Holy Land



I cannot, of course, presume to speak for others who have gone to The Holy Land. However, speaking for myself, I must say that my first trip to The Holy Land has been a profoundly impacting experience. This has been so on many levels. Before I go let me explain that I am using the phrase The Holy Land to refer to this geographical area where at least most of the events of the Gospels took place to avoid some of the religious and political divisiveness that might occur if I refer to it only as Israel or only as Palestine, let alone begin to use both terms. That is because what is now known as Israel only covers a part of that territory. Likewise, what is known as Palestine does not constitute the whole area referred to. Of course, there are many who would not even refer to Palestine as a state, but that begins to lead to the discussions that I want to avoid, as they are not germane to what I am writing about here.

The most basic level that I would describe, would simply be the sense that one has now been on the earth in the same places where so many characters one has learned about since childhood spent their lives. So many stories that one was told took place here. Most important, of course, is that this was a spot of geography to which God chose for his son Jesus, the Christ, to come to live, die and be resurrected. Reading and studying the scriptures will never be the same. There is ever that sense in one's mind that one can identify with where what one is reading about took place. There is in some indescribable way a new depth to what one reads in the Bible.

At the same time, it did not really take long for the sense to grow that this is a place I want to return to. Some of that is because the first trip only opened up many more areas of unanswered questions related to the recent history and experience of those who live in this land between The Mediterranean Sea and of the Jordan River, questions that can best be answered by going to more places and meeting more people than we did on our first eight-day trip.

However, it goes deeper than that. I am not sure what those of our tour members who have been there multiple times would say about why they have returned, but besides what I said above, I think it has something to do with the basic sense that this is where much if not all of God's history has its focus. I don't know about all of those prophecies that are being interpreted by some to suggest that events such as the establishment of the State of Israel mean the end of this era and Christ's Second Coming are more imminent than ever. Jesus himself told us not to worry about these sorts of things but to carry on with our lives, watching and waiting. When he was on this earth, he said he himself did not know, only The Father. He specifically warned about many who would make predictions about his return that would prove false.

But I think my feelings and thoughts about going to The Holy Land are echoed in prophetic passages from the Old Testament scriptures like Zechariah 8:23: “Thus says the Lord of hosts: in those days ten men from nations of every language shall take hold of a Jew, grasping his garment and saying, ‘Let us go with you, for we have heard that God is with you.’" Or, Isaiah 2:3: "Many peoples shall come and say, ‘Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; that he may teach us his ways and that we may walk in his paths.’ For out of Zion shall go forth instruction, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem." Finally: Isaiah 55:5 “See, you shall call nations that you do not know, and nations that do not know you shall run to you, because of the Lord your God, the holy one of Israel, for he has glorified you."

The only missing part(s) here yet are that with all that is going on between the Israelis and Palestinians, one does not yet see that God can be with the Israelis with the way they ignore repeated passages from their own scriptures and lessons they were to learn from their own history in how they treat the Palestinians, so I am not sure we can learn much from the Jews there yet. We are certainly not, for the most part, at the point where we can 'grasp the cloak of a Jew, ' at least not most of them, and expect to go there and get lessons in how to live as God's people.  However, it will come. In God’s time. To be sure, He is also working with and through those Jews who want justice done and human rights respected, but they are still only a prophetic minority in their own state. Now, if anything, we see God at work with the Christians there who are mostly Palestinians, and that is where we need to be. We must ever be working where God is at work.






3 comments:

  1. I like what you wrote here but I wouldn't blame it all on the Israelites. The Palestinians are taught as are all the other Islamic people's in the countrys all around Israel to hate and even call Jews pigs and so on. I don't mean the Christian Palestinians of course or the Arabs that are happy to be living in Israel and there is many.

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  2. Thanks John. I'm sure we want the same for all peoples, especially our fellow Christians. I try to be careful with words. Where the problems lie are with the Israeli government. Not all Israelis or Jews in other countries even support its actions about the way it oppresses Christians and Muslims alike. The problems also lie with many Christians in The West who simply support Israel because it is now again a state in the promised land. I am not debating the validity of that. I am only calling on Israel and the Christians who often too blindly support it to be fair and just to its citizens and the people in the lands it has illegally - by international law - occupied, just as we would expect ogler government to be. Indeed, we challenge our government in its treatment of First Nations peoples, which, historically, and even now, is sometimes too similar to how Israel treats the people who were there before them. Israel and its supporting Christians quote the Old Testament about getting rid of the pagan tribes there when they returned to the promised land under Moses. That is no longer relevant. The people living there now are Christian or Muslim. No more sacrificing babies, fertility religions, idol worship etc., what God was punishing those tribes for. the Old Testament commands don't apply. There are Christians there who have been keeping the faith since Jesus time but they feel they are being ignored and sacrificed by their Christians brothers and sisters in the rest of the world who so unequivocally support Israel in its persecution of non-Jews and its attempts to pursue ethnic cleansing without challenging its faults.

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  3. Thanks Lorne, for your thoughts. We had an amazing Journey. And you are right, have you once been in The Holy Land, walking the same paths as Jesus did, you always want to be back. At the same time it is painful to watch how Palestinians are treated worse and worse. We have to pray harder and harder for a justice peace with dignity for all people in the Holy Land.

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