Today's promise: God protects His people
The land of Israel
O my people, I will
open your graves of exile and cause you to rise again. Then I will bring you
back to the land of Israel.
Ezekiel 37:12 NLT
Birth of a Nation
In 63 B.C. the Roman
armies invaded the land of Israel and made it part of the Roman Empire. Then
Jesus came, and in response to the Jews' rejection of him as their Messiah, he
predicted that the Jewish temple would be completely destroyed (Luke 21:6), a
prediction fulfilled in A.D. 70. After a second revolt in A.D. 135, no Jews
lived in Jerusalem, and they became scattered through the world.
Then in the late
1800s, in response to anti-Semitism, particularly in eastern Europe, a Jewish
movement called Zionism arose. In 1917 in an attempt to win Jewish support for
World War I, England issued the Balfour Declaration, supporting the creation
"in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people."
Following War World
II, Britain turned the matter of a Jewish state to the newly created U.N.,
which voted on November 29, 1947 to endorse a plan to create separate Jewish
and Arab states, with Jerusalem as an international zone.
The British Mandate
was scheduled to end on May 15, 1948, at which time their troops would
begin leaving. The day before, a historic meeting was held in Tel Aviv. At
exactly 4:00 p.m. the meeting was called to order by David Ben-Gurion. The
audience rose and sang "Hatikvah," the Israeli national anthem. Then
Ben-Gurion read in Hebrew Israel's Declaration of Independence. Everyone in the
audience stood to their feet and applauded, many with tears streaming down
their faces. For the first time in two thousand years there was an independent
Jewish state of Israel.
The very existence of
present-day Israel is a reminder to us of God's faithfulness in keeping his
promises. (Ezekiel 37:1-13)
Adapted from The One Year® Book of Christian History by
E. Michael and Sharon Rusten (Tyndale, 2003), entry for May 15.
Content is derived
from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation and other publications of Tyndale
Publishing House
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