Saturday, July 25, 2015

GIDEON'S ARMY
 
And the Lord said to Gideon, “The people who are with you are too many for Me to give the Midianites into their hands, lest Israel claim glory for itself against Me, saying, ‘My own hand has saved me.’
 
Judges 7:2

After the time of the Judge Deborah, the people of Israel once more 'did evil in the sight of God' and He gave them over to the Midianites for seven years. The Midianites lived in the lands to the east of the Gulf of Aqaba, which today is in Saudi Arabia. The Midianites, together with the Amalekites and others from the East, constantly raided Israel, taking their grain and livestock, causing great suffering, until the Israelites, in desperation, called out to God. In response God raised up a Judge called Gideon, the least son of the least clan of the half-tribe of Manasseh. There came a time when the Midianites, with their allies from the East, raised up a vast army, of at least 135,000 fighting men  (Judges 8:11), and they camped  in the Jezreel Valley below the Hill of Moreh.







https://ferrelljenkins.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/harod_map-sm.jpg
 
Gideon also raised up an army and camped opposite the Midianites at Ein Harod (The Spring of Harod).
 
 


Ein Harod and Mt Moreh today https://lukechandler.files.wordpress.com/2009/07/dscf0160.jpg?w=640


 
Gideon's army was vastly outnumbered since it consisted of only 32,000 men, about a quarter the size of the Midianite hordes!
Now the Midianites and Amalekites, all the people of the East, were lying in the valley as numerous as locusts; and their camels were without number, as the sand by the seashore in multitude
Judges 7:12
 
What chance did Israel have against so great an enemy? And yet, God said Gideon's army were too many, and He commanded Gideon to send all but 300 home. Why? It must have seemed crazy, but God intended to fight for Israel and He wanted to be sure that they, and all their enemies, would know that it was He who would give Israel victory. He would demonstrate His power and his love for Israel in a way that all could see, and in a way that would make it impossible for the people to take the glory for themselves. And He did. With God's help Gideon's tiny army succeeded in driving the Midianite hordes from the Land and the people of Israel enjoyed peace for 40 years.
 
Today Israel is surrounded by a great many enemies, some of whom have vast armies, far outnumbering ours. According to the Global Firepower Index, Iran alone has an  army of around 2 million soldiers currently in front-line service or in active reserves, and another 40 million fit for duty if needed (http://www.globalfirepower.com/country-military-strength-detail.asp?country_id=iran). Add to that the armies of all the other enemies of Israel and you will see we are vastly outnumbered and that is an understatement.  Israel has only about 700,000 soldiers in active or reserve duty, and perhaps another around 3 million fit for duty at a pinch. What chance would we have if all our enemies attacked together now?
 
This week a Commission headed by Maj.-Gen. (res.) Yohanan Locker published its report that recommends the IDF (Israel Defense Force) budget be cut by 9.6 billion shekels each year over the next 4 years.  These 'efficiency' cuts would include a reduction of 11 % of the army's resources and personnel by 2017,  and cutting back the length of compulsory service and reserve duties, among other measures. It seems crazy considering the massive military threat Israel currently faces - just as crazy as Gideon's cuts. But perhaps God is preparing the stage, for yet another spectacular demonstration of his power and love for Israel. I remember the saying 'Me plus God is a majority'. Its true. As long as God is for us who can be against us? (Romans 8:31).
 
In that day the Lord will defend the inhabitants of Jerusalem; the one who is feeble among them in that day shall be like David, and the house of David shall be like God, like the Angel of the Lord before them. It shall be in that day that I will seek to destroy all the nations that come against Jerusalem.
Zechariah 12: 8-9

For the day of the Lord upon all the nations is near;
As you have done, it shall be done to you;
Your reprisal shall return upon your own head.
16 For as you drank on My holy mountain,
So shall all the nations drink continually;
Yes, they shall drink, and swallow,
And they shall be as though they had never been.

17 “But on Mount Zion there shall be deliverance,
And there shall be holiness;
The house of Jacob shall possess their possessions.
18 The house of Jacob shall be a fire,
And the house of Joseph a flame;
But the house of Esau shall be stubble;
They shall kindle them and devour them,
And no survivor shall remain of the house of Esau,”
For the Lord has spoken.
Obadiah v. 18

 
Although we know that in the end, the God of Israel will triumph and destroy all those who rise up against his holy people, I fear this will not happen until the people themselves cry out for salvation and rescue. The LORD is bringing Israel back to her land, but most are returning in a state of unbelief. We are all aware of the threats hanging over us but most are living in a state of denial with an 'eat, drink and be merry' attitude, instead of  repentance. Since the foundation of the State there have been many wars and confrontations with our neighbors and in each one God has clearly intervened to save many lives and to give Israel, though vastly outnumbered, the victory. There are many, many reports of miraculous events that support this view. I have noticed that as long as the fighting is going on, the newspapers and the people do give recognition to the hand of the LORD and his supernatural protection, but as soon as the fighting stops, everyone forgets, gives glory to the IDF and our own strength, and then everything goes back to normal. We forget so quickly the goodness of the LORD.  
 
There are many parallels between our times and the time when the remnant of  Judah under the leadership of Ezra and Nehemiah returned to Jerusalem from Babylon, and rebuilt the Temple and the walls around the city.  They too had to hold a weapon in one hand and build with the other, for their neighbors lead by Tobias, Sanballat and Geshem the Arab, fought against them. Even so, it took them, under the leadership of Nehemiah, only 52 days to completely repair the entire city wall which the Babylonians had totally destroyed.  And their enemies were astounded:
 
   And it happened, when all our enemies heard of it, and all the nations around us saw these things, that they were very disheartened in their own eyes; for they perceived that this work was done by our God.
Nehemiah 6:16
 
Once the work was complete, all the people, in the seventh month gathered together and Nehemiah read to them the Book of the Law, and when they heard its words, and realized their sin, they wept. That year the whole people kept the Feast of Tabernacles with joy, but when it was over they gathered together with fasting, wearing sackcloth and with ashes on their heads, confessing and repenting of their sin. They then entered into a solemn curse and an oath "to walk in God’s Law, which was given by Moses the servant of God, and to observe and do all the commandments of the Lord our Lord, and His ordinances and His statutes"(Nehemiah 10:29). Later, at the dedication of the wall, all the people rejoiced with great joy before God:
Also that day they offered great sacrifices, and rejoiced, for God had made them rejoice with great joy; the women and the children also rejoiced, so that the joy of Jerusalem was heard afar off.
Nehemiah 12: 43.  
 
Yet, what happened?  Nehemiah had to return to Babylon for a time, and the minute his back was turned, the people permitted their erstwhile enemy, Tobias, to set up his household in the Temple itself, corrupting the priesthood and the sacrifices, and all the people turned away from the commandments of God, profaning the Sabbath. How short our memory! However Nehemiah returned, worked to restore the proper functioning of the priesthood, and eventually cleansed the Land of all pagan worship. (Nehemiah 13:30).

What will it take to convict the people of Israel today of their sin and bring them to repentance? Today the nations are gathering around against Jerusalem, and the stage is being set for a mighty battle that Israel's little army could never win. When all hope of victory will be lost, then the people will cry out and God will step in and bring victory, as is prophesied in Jeremiah 12  and elsewhere. God will save Israel and he will destroy her enemies. Zion will see victory, Israel will be restored, not only physically but also spiritually.  All Israel will be saved and they will know their Messiah  (Romans 11:26). Hallelujah!



 And what else is happening in Israel this summer?
 
This week the first intake of the year of new draftees into the IDF took place. At least 43 young Messianic believers will be in this year's draft, and I believe there are currently  around 300 believers serving in the IDF. Please remember to pray for these young men and women who face a lot of challenges, not the least that of being separated from family and congregation, whilst being subjected to a great degree of peer pressure to conform to the behavior and beliefs of their comrades. In spite of this many of our wonderful young people have been recognized as outstanding soldiers and most stand firm in their faith shining as a light to their peers.

 
 
High summer is now upon us and the children are on vacation. The heat out on my balcony has just driven me indoors for the relative cool of my apartment (the indoor thermometer is reading 30 degrees!), even though it is just 9AM. We cannot complain however as the summer has not been particularly hot up until now, and the low humidity (about 30%) here on our mountain keeps the heat bearable. Only one year ago, Operation Tsuk Eitan was in progress in Gaza, and  our poor soldiers were sweating it out in army fatigues, sleeping  in the dust, behind their tanks, and risking their lives every  minute. The civilians in the south were crammed into  sweltering bomb shelters as the sirens blared warning of incoming rockets and missiles, sometimes as many as 12 times a day.
 
One day this week I took myself off to the lovely swimming pool at Ramat Rachel nearby.  As I arrived at the pool, I was thinking how great it was to be able to swim,  and relax on the lawns under the trees, without having to worry about where I would have to run to if the sirens went off. Just at that very moment, the siren went off!!!! I had to laugh at the irony. Everyone stopped and a ripple of shock passed through us all until the head lifeguard called to us that it was just an exercise. Even so in the midst of the blaring noise, which went on some minutes, there was an eerie silence. Everyone stopped, no one talked or walked or swam. We just stood there. I know my stomach twisted as it always does when the sirens go. I was probably not alone and I am sure we all shared the same thoughts, remembering last summer, and knowing that the threat of war is hovering over us all the time. It was a harsh reminder that the calm and joy of our summer vacation could be cut short any moment. Later that same day, in the evening, our neighborhood peace was rent by the sound of several large explosions nearby, followed by gunfire and hovering helicopters (a sure sign that something is amiss). I never did learn what happened but since then we have been hearing sporadic gunfire in the Arab villages across the valley.  This is not unusual and sometimes it is just a wedding celebration or some other event at which is it customary in Arab society to shoot off guns (forgetting that bullets fired into the air, must come down somewhere!). However it had been quiet for several months since the police cracked down on the disturbances earlier in the year. I hope that this does not mark a return to the sporadic explosions and volleys  of gunfire we used to have almost daily.

Many of Israel's children are currently enjoying summer camps. All over Israel you can see groups of happy, laughing children having the time of their lives, playing games, touring the Land, and swimming. But what about the kids in Gaza? There the kids are going to 'summer camp' too, but the goal of these Hamas-run camps is "to train the vanguard for liberation: spiritually, intellectually and physically, to be ready and able to play its role in liberation," according to a statement by the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas' military wing. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4683772,00.html This  year's 'summer camp' accepts people from the ages of 15 to 60, and 25,000 are attending, mostly youngsters.  They are  being taught how to fire live ammunition (using portraits of Israeli leaders for targets) and how to infiltrate and carry out attacks through terror tunnels, hand-to-hand combat and other military skills. Worse still, they are being indoctrinated and brainwashed into a culture of hatred and violence.  





Israeli youngsters enjoying summer camp
http://www.tshcamp.com/wp-content/gallery/daycamp2/740x420_swim.jpg


 Gazan children show off their skills at their 'summer camp' - with real guns..
http://www.ynet.co.il/PicServer2/24012010/2688381/k1_wa.jpg

Where is the outcry of the human rights groups about this abuse and  the brutalization of a whole generation of children? How is it that Hamas has money for this but not to rebuild homes destroyed in the war they started last year? Perhaps those 25,000 young people would have been better employed rebuilding those parts of Gaza destroyed in last year's war, or learning the skills needed to build a better future for themselves and their people?
 
Another feature of Israeli summers are forest and brush fires. Yesterday two large fires broke out. One, in the Galilee, was brought under control quickly, but another near Beit Shemesh burned out of control for many hours. This was the biggest fire since the catastrophic fire on the Carmel in 2010 in which 40 people perished. Thankfully since that time our fire fighting capability has improved, not the least by the acquisition of at least 13 planes that can drop fire retardant. With the help of 150 firefighters and volunteers, and the planes, the villages of  Tarum, Kfar Uriya and Ta'oz  were saved and there was no loss of life. Nevertheless 370 acres of wooded land were burned.
 
There is an especially high fire risk in the pine forests around Jerusalem. High temperatures, strong winds,  combined with pine resins and  a lot of dead branches brought down by the snow over the last years,  all creates a volatile mix. Just a piece of glass in the sunshine is enough to ignite a fire which can spread very quickly. The fire near Beit Shemesh yesterday is thought to have started when an (illegal) rubbish fire got out of control, but over the past years many fires have been lit by arsonists as acts of terrorism.
 
 
 
 
Photo: Beit Shemesh Fire and Rescue
 
 
Photo: Beit Shemesh Fire and Rescue  
 
 
 I have only two weeks left of my summer vacation and then  it will be back to work. I plan to enjoy every moment . However please join me in lifting up the people of Israel at this time. Tension and stress levels run high. Many people go abroad during the summer for a time of rest and to visit relatives. When here we just get on with life and mostly are not so aware of the stress levels, but when you go out of the Land it is as if a heavy burden is lifted, and you realize how much tension you have been under.  But then you must come home and for many re-entry is difficult.  Please remember us all in your prayers. They are important and God hears them all.




 













Monday, July 20, 2015


HEAR MY PRAYER
 
Hear my prayer, O Lord,
And let my cry come to You.
Do not hide Your face from me in the day of my trouble;
Incline Your ear to me;
In the day that I call, answer me speedily.
For my days are consumed like smoke,
And my bones are burned like a hearth...
My enemies reproach me all day long;...
 
12 But You, O Lord, shall endure forever,
And the remembrance of Your name to all generations.
13 You will arise and have mercy on Zion;
For the time to favor her,
Yes, the set time, has come.
14 For Your servants take pleasure in her stones,
And show favor to her dust.

15 So the nations shall fear the name of the Lord,
And all the kings of the earth Your glory.
16 For the Lord shall build up Zion;
He shall appear in His glory.

17 He shall regard the prayer of the destitute,
And shall not despise their prayer...
 
 
Psalm 102
 
A deceptive quiet lies over Jerusalem and the whole of Israel  at this time, as during the day we tend to hide indoors to escape the summer heat ,or relax at the pool, coming out only in the delightful cool of the evening to stroll, make barbecues with our friends and drink coffee at the cafes. The children are on vacation and many families have gone abroad to visit family or just escape the pressures of life in Israel.
 
How to keep cool in Jerusalem in summer
http://www.jerusalemfoundation.org/media/87403/Jerusalem-Summer-Fun-in-Teddy-Park_500x375.jpg
 
Yet the quiet is an illusion. This week it has been 'business as usual' in Jerusalem and elsewhere in Israel.  On Wednesday a 22 year old Palestinian  woman attempted to kill an IDF soldier by stabbing him in the back at  a military post in the West Bank. The soldier was taken to hospital with light-to-moderate wounds (http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4680288,00.html). 
 
At 2 AM on Thursday morning residents of the Ashkelon region scrambled out of bed, grabbed the kids and the dog, and fled to their 'safe rooms' as the code red sirens sounded warning of an incoming medium-range missile  fired from the Gaza Strip. Fortunately it landed in an open field causing no damage or injuries. Later that same morning the Israeli Air Force bombed an infrastructure site in Gaza in retaliation. One passerby was lightly injured. This is just the latest of a number of such attacks in recent weeks. There were six such incidents in the month of June alone https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Palestinian_rocket_attacks_on_Israel,_2015 .  In addition, on Friday the 3rd of July, three rockets were fired from the Sinai and two landed in Israel near Eilat, causing no damage or injuries.  An Islamic State affiliated group claimed responsibility. http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/07/isil-affiliate-sinai-claims-rocket-attack-israel-150703192810233.html These rocket attacks are not primarily designed to antagonize Israel, but to destabilize the Egyptian regime in the Sinai and the Hamas regime in Gaza, and to promote the power and ideology of the Islamic State (formerly ISIS). Already by last November polls in Gaza showed that some 24% of the population supports the Islamic State either totally or 'to some extent'. http://unitedwithisrael.org/poll-palestinians-greatest-supporters-of-isis-in-middle-east-2/?ios_app=true
 
This week we also learned of two Israelis being held in Gaza. One, a young man of Ethiopian descent, Avera Mengistu, 28, climbed over the fence and entered the Gaza Strip via the adjacent Zikim Beach shortly after the ceasefire with Hamas in September last year. Mengistu is known to the authorities as suffering from psychological issues and is possibly mentally challenged. He may have been drinking when he crossed into Gaza. Whatever the truth he was captured and questioned by Hamas who claim they released him once they ascertained that he was not a soldier. His current whereabouts is unknown, but Israeli officials believe that Hamas is holding him and a second missing Israeli citizen, an unnamed Bedouin Arab, who for unknown reasons also crossed into Gaza. The fear is that these two prisoners, along with the bodies of two soldiers captured during Operation Cast Lead last year, will be used by Hamas to attempt to broker another prisoner exchange, something Israel has already said it will not countenance.
 
A photograph Avera Mengistu, 28, from his Facebook page.
A photo of Mengistu from his facebook page
http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/1.663653
 
The big news this week of course is the Iran deal. After 20 months of negotiations the P5+1 group of nations ( the US, UK, France, China and Russia plus Germany)  and Iran have come to an agreement, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA),  aimed at scaling down Iran's nuclear capability and easing economic sanctions against it. 
 

The Negotiating Team
http://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-explains/2015/07/economist-explains-11
Iran has three uranium mines and the ore from these must be enriched before it can be used. Natural uranium consists of two isotopes U-235 and U-238. Only U-235 can be used for fueling power stations or for making nuclear warheads or bombs. Natural uranium is only about 0.711% U-235.  For fuel purposes the uranium must be enriched so that it is about 3-4% U-235, and for a warhead or bomb it must be enriched to 90%. Enrichment is done by feeding uranium hexafluoride gas into centrifuges and spinning it so that the heavier U-238 sinks to the bottom and the lighter U-235 rises. It can then be separated out. There are currently two enrichment facilities operating, the main one at Natanz and another at Fordo.
 
null

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-33521655
 
With this background let us look more closely at the JCPOA deal. There are 8 main points:
 
  • At present Iran has 19,500 centrifuges at their main enrichment facility at Natanz. Under the new agreement only 5060 of these, will be allowed to operate over the next 10 years, and these will all be first-generation centrifuges, which can only produce low-enriched uranium suitable for fueling power stations and for medical, agricultural, industrial and scientific purposes.  
  • At the second enrichment facility, at Fordo, all enrichment will cease and no enriched uranium will be produced for at least 15 years. The facility will be turned into a physics research center.
  • Iran's current stockpile of low-enriched uranium (which could potentially be spun into weapons-grade material) must be reduced 98%, from 9,000 kg to 300 kg for the next 15 years.
  • The heavy-water reactor at Arak will be redesigned and its original core, which would have produced significant quantities of weapons-grade plutonium, will be removed and destroyed. No other heavy-water reactor will be built for 15 years.
  • Inspectors from the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) will be able to inspect any facility, declared or otherwise, as long as it is deemed to be “suspicious”.
  • If Iran refuses access to a military site, a joint commission made up of representatives of the parties to the agreement will quickly rule on whether it must open the facility up. If it still refuses, Iran would then be in violation of the agreement and might face the re-imposition of sanctions.
  • The IAEA will also have access to every part of Iran’s nuclear supply chain to ensure that nothing is being channeled to a clandestine facility. Such powers for the IAEA, which will remain in place indefinitely, are more sweeping than those it had under the normal safeguard agreements that had previously applied to Iran under the NPT.
  • Iran will address the IAEA’s concerns about what it calls the Possible Military Dimensions of its nuclear program.
 

Is this a 'good deal'? Will it hold? Will the deal be ratified and implemented by all nations concerned? Can Iran be trusted, given its past track record and continued threats against Israel and the USA? Is the IAEA really able to monitor what Iran is doing in its large, mountainous country? Does the world have the will to re-impose sanctions should Iran fail to keep its word? What will happen after the 10 - 15 years are up? These are all questions that only time will tell and history will judge.
 
Perhaps the Deal will buy us a little time, if it can be implemented and enforced ( and that is a big 'if'). But then what?  At the end of the 10 year period Iran will have a legitimate right under international law to reactivate its centrifuges and rebuild its enriched uranium stockpiles. They already boast that they can have as many as 190,000 centrifuges up and running within weeks and, in the same time frame, quickly produce nuclear warheads to load onto the missiles they are continuing to buy from Russia and are producing themselves on a large scale, missiles capable of reaching targets in the Middle East, Europe and even the USA. The Deal does not address Iran's conventional weapon development and proliferation. Nor does it address the risk of a nuclear arms race in the Middle East. Other Middle Eastern states are already saying that if Iran is allowed to produce nuclear weapons they too must do so.
 
Furthermore, even with the current sanctions imposed against it ,Iran is managing to fund, train and arm many terror organizations including  the Taliban in Pakistan, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza and the West Bank, Islamic Jihad in Iraq, Gaza and elsewhere, and the Houthis currently overrunning Yemen. The US State department considers Iran the world's most active state sponsor of terrorism, and former Secretary of State, Condoleeza Rice described it as " the country that has been in many ways a kind of central banker for terrorism".  http://www.cfr.org/iran/state-sponsors-iran/p9362 .  Under the Deal, Iran will receive at least $US100 billion when sanctions are lifted. Even if it does not channel this money directly into terrorist organizations, an economically stronger Iran will be able to pour even more money into funding terrorism, which is directed at destroying the US and Western influence  worldwide (the 'Big Satan') and Israel (the "Little Satan) . The Deal does not address this issue in any way. No wonder the Iranian delegate to the P5+1 negotiations, Mohammad Javad Zarif, the Iranian foreign minister, went home with a smile on his faces (more a Freudian slip than a typo!).  And Kerry prayed....


http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/03249/kerry-zarif_3249914b.jpg
 
And a  worried Netanyahu prayed too....
 
http://s1.ibtimes.com/sites/www.ibtimes.com/files/styles/v2_article_large/public/2015/04/05/netanyahu-iran.JPG
So what can we do? What is our responsibility in all of these things as believers in the Messiah, Yeshua (Jesus)? In my last post I wrote of our responsibility as a 'kingdom of priests'. What is the role of a priest? There are many functions and I will write more about that another time, but one of the main functions is as an intercessor - a 'go-between' between God and the people.  First and foremost we must pray about all these things. God is working out his redemption plan and we need to be working alongside and with Him. This begs the question, "How must we pray?" It is hard to know sometimes, but we can always pray in the Spirit with sighs deeper than words, and allow the Holy Spirit in us to interpret these cries. And God hears our cries. They are effective and they matter. By our prayers we participate in the  working out of the redemption of the world. As I quoted from Psalm 102 verse 17 above,  
He shall regard the prayer of the destitute,And shall not despise their prayer...
We are often 'destitute' as we pray, in that we do not have the understanding to know how to pray, nor the power to change anything ourselves, but the LORD will not despise our prayers . They are a pleasing incense rising to the Him (Revelation 5:8).  He will work it all out and one day, perhaps not so very far in the future, we will see all the nations bowing down to Him - Iran, Israel, the USA and every nation of the Earth. 

Behold, He is coming with clouds, and every eye will see Him, even they who pierced Him. And all the tribes of the earth will mourn because of Him.
Even so, Amen.
 
Revelation 1: 17

Sunday, July 12, 2015


 
A ROYAL PRIESTHOOD
 
 
To Him who loved us and washed us from our sins in His own blood, and has made us kings  and priests to His God and Father, to Him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.
 
Revelation 1: 5-6
 
 
I have just returned home after a short holiday in the Forest of Dean in the lovely, green hills of the west of England. Leaving the lush, fertile fields and  leafy forests of England, with its mild and well-watered climate, I couldn't help but wonder why God did not choose that blessed land in which to establish his holy people. Flying into Tel Aviv at sunset, with the shimmering heat haze mixing with the pollution to cast a golden glow across the brown, sere summer landscape the contrast could not have been greater. And yet it was good to be home. In my absence high summer has settled upon the land. School is out, many have flown abroad to visit relatives and find relief from the stresses of life in Jerusalem, the tourists braving the heat are few, the Ramadan fast lies on the Muslim population, and the city has a certain air of somnolence about it. All seems peaceful but, of course, this is just an illusion (and a bit of wishful thinking), for the tensions in the city are no less in reality. Terror attacks continue on an almost daily basis, Iran continues to play games with the West while building up its nuclear and military potential, and funding and supplying arms to Hezbollah and Hamas, our sworn-enemies to the north and south. The Islamic State creeps inexorably closer through Syria and Egypt, and its toxic ideology gains ground in the hope-starved youth of the region, even within our own borders. With so many threats around and within our little nation, any semblance of peace can be nothing more than the lull before the storm.
 
And I am reminded of the fact that we, who believe in Yeshua (Jesus) have a calling, one we don't think about very much, and that is the calling of a priest. Evangelical Christians shy away from ideas of a priesthood, so we tend to ignore or be unaware of this calling, yet John writing to the churches of Asia, as recorded for all of us in the Book of Revelation describes us as a 'kingdom of priests' (or in some versions, kings and priests) (see quotation above).  It is true that we as believers do not need priests to act as intermediaries between us and God, as in former times. At the moment when Yeshua died on the cross, the veil of partition between the Holy of Holies and the Holy Place, where the ordinary priests served, was rent from top to bottom, something only God could have done  (Matthew 27:51). This proclaimed the fact that we, as ordinary priests, now have direct access to God by the Holy Spirit in Yeshua. We no longer need priests to intercede for us, and we have a Great High Priest, Yeshua, who has offered the only true sacrifice for our sins, his own blood, and who intercedes for us continuously in heaven. The wall between the Holy Place and the Outer Courtyard, the place of the common people,  was not destroyed however. Those who are not of the priesthood, those who as yet are unsaved, still do not have access to God. They still need priests to act as intermediaries and intercessors.

Plan of the Mosaic Tabernacle
http://blog.try-god.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/tabernacle.png

The Tabernacle of Moses is long gone and the Aaronic priesthood, and the sacrificial system were destroyed two thousand years ago when the Romans conquered Jerusalem and destroyed the Temple. These things have never been restored to this day. So how is it we are described as a kingdom of priests? In what way are we to function as priests today?
 
There is much I could say about the Aaronic Priesthood and the Tabernacle, its design and its symbolism. The writer to the Hebrews described the Mosaic Tabernacle as the 'copy and shadow' of the 'heavenly things' (Hebrews 8:5). Every aspect of the Tabernacle was designed and spelled out in detail by the LORD himself, and is full of deep symbolism and relevance for us today. The Tabernacle foreshadows the Kingdom of God in its fullness under the High Priesthood of Yeshua (Hebrews 9). The other day I was reading in the book of Exodus chapter 28 God's instructions to Moses about the garments of the High Priest.
 
Some things stood out for me as I read this passage;
They shall take the gold, blue, purple, and scarlet thread, and the fine linen, and they shall make the ephod of gold, blue, purple, and scarlet thread, and fine woven linen, artistically worked... (verses 5 and 6)
 Then you shall take two onyx stones and engrave on them the names of the sons of Israel: 10 six of their names on one stone and six names on the other stone, in order of their birth. 11 With the work of an engraver in stone, like the engravings of a signet, you shall engrave the two stones with the names of the sons of Israel. You shall set them in settings of gold. 12 And you shall put the two stones on the shoulders of the ephod as memorial stones for the sons of Israel. So Aaron shall bear their names before the Lord on his two shoulders as a memorial. (verses 9-12)
 You shall make the breastplate of judgment. Artistically woven according to the workmanship of the ephod you shall make it: of gold, blue, purple, and scarlet thread, and fine woven linen, you shall make it... (verse 15)
 And the stones shall have the names of the sons of Israel, twelve according to their names, like the engravings of a signet, each one with its own name; they shall be according to the twelve tribes.... (verse 21)
  So Aaron shall bear the names of the sons of Israel on the breastplate of judgment over his heart, when he goes into the holy place, as a memorial before the Lord continually. 30 And you shall put in the breastplate of judgment the Urim and the Thummim, and they shall be over Aaron’s heart when he goes in before the Lord. So Aaron shall bear the judgment of the children of Israel over his heart before the Lord continually. (verses 29-30).
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Thus it was whenever the High Priest donned his ceremonial garments he bore before God the names of the 12 tribes of Israel, once on his shoulders as a memorial before God, and once on the breastplate of judgment, close to his heart. So too today, our Great High Priest, Yeshua, still bears the names of the tribes of Israel on his shoulders and close to his heart as He intercedes on our behalf, and we too, the kingdom of priests, need to do the same.

This is the calling of intercession. There are some who have a special callings and gifting as intercessors, but we are all called to intercede for Israel, and indeed for all the Gentile nations as well, for their salvation.

This week I also read these words in Psalm 147,
The Lord builds up Jerusalem;
He gathers together the outcasts of Israel.
He heals the brokenhearted
And binds up their wounds...
 Praise the Lord, O Jerusalem!
Praise your God, O Zion!
13 For He has strengthened the bars of your gates;
He has blessed your children within you.
14 He makes peace in your borders,
And fills you with the finest wheat...
 
 
He sends out His command to the earth;
His word runs very swiftly.
16 He gives snow like wool;
He scatters the frost like ashes;
17 He casts out His hail like morsels;
Who can stand before His cold?
18 He sends out His word and melts them;
He causes His wind to blow, and the waters flow.
19 He declares His word to Jacob,
His statutes and His judgments to Israel.
20 He has not dealt thus with any nation;
And as for His judgments, they have not known them.
Praise the Lord!

 God's word is swift and powerful, and nothing can stand against it.  He declared his Word to Israel, to her prophets and priests, and the Word, Yeshua, came to Israel. The LORD has not dealt so with any other nation. Furthermore, He has not yet finished with Israel. He is even in our day gathering her outcasts back to the Holy Land,  and binding up their wounds. One day He will reveal Himself to them in Yeshua, the Messiah. We need to be participants in God's work in our day. We need to be interceding in prayer faithfully for the people of Israel, together with all the Gentiles, who are as yet unsaved. When Yeshua comes again, and this may be very soon, He will be revealed in glory as the Messiah, and all the peoples of the Earth will weep before him., even 'those who pierced him',
Behold, He is coming with clouds, and every eye will see Him, even they who pierced Him. And all the tribes of the earth will mourn because of Him. Even so, Amen.
Revelation 1: 7 
 
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