Today ‘By the Way’ is reposting the article below from
the United with Israel website www.unitedwithisrael.org
These are challenging days for Israel. Christians should continue to pray for
and support Israel as it takes its stand against those who threaten the peace
of the world. 'By the Way' is proud to stand with Israel.
The
Biblical Roots of Israel Standing Alone
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke to the
68th Session of the United Nations General Assembly and told the world that
Iran’s nuclear threat is a clear and present danger. Netanyahu announced, “If
Israel is forced to stand alone, Israel will stand alone, and in standing alone
Israel will know that we will be defending many many others.”
Netanyahu is the not first Jew to declare the People of
Israel’s willingness to be different from the rest of the world. In the Book of
Genesis, God asks Abraham, the first Jew, to “go from your land, your
relatives, and from your fathers house to the land that I will show you.”
(Genesis 12:1) According to Jewish tradition, Abraham rejected idolatry and was
the first to choose monotheistic faith based on the belief in God’s unity. In the
Torah, Abraham is called the Ivri (the Hebrew) for two reasons. On a literal
level, Ivri refers to “the other side” of the Jordan River, from whence Abraham
originated. On a deeper level, Torah commentators explain that Abraham stood on
the opposite side of everyone else with regard to his values and faith.
In the Book of Numbers, the prophet Bilam, while gazing
upon the tents of Israel, prophesized, “Behold! It is a nation that will dwell
in solitude and not be reckoned among the nations.”
Thousands of years later, these words continue to
resonate. During Israel’s War of Independence in 1948, the Six Day War of 1967,
the Yom Kippur War of 1973, and all other major military conflicts, Israel
received support, yet the nation remained the sole active defender of her
sovereignty.
In connection to
Netanyahu’s recent UN address, Rabbi Aaron Leibowitz, a teacher and community
activist in Jerusalem, commented, “The Prime Minister was accurate in assuming
responsibility for the world and for the region, but we shouldn’t forget that
responsibility is something that is special, that the Jewish people share with
God, and the Jewish people are never alone.”
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