
This
Land Is Mine

When you approach the ancient land of Israel from the south, over the Sinai peninsula, you
are impressed with two things--the stark beauty of the terrain and its utter desolation.
Proceeding north, up the Great Rift valley, the nakedness of the Arabah and the Negev is
even more intense. The Dead Sea basin and the surrounding wilderness of Judea continue the
same pattern of a lifeless wasteland.
Approaching from the southwest,
over the cool, blue waters of the Mediterranean, and entering the land south of Gaza, even
the palms on the oases appear like a mirage through the rising dust of the desert.
The cities, too, of the southland
of Israel, such as Dimona and Gaza, remind one more of an outpost on the moon than cities
that belong to the twentieth century. The northern part of Israel, in the Galilee and the
Golan Heights, while much more fertile than the south, is nevertheless a formidable land
from which to scratch a living. Only in the lush valley of Jezreel, the broad plains of
Sharon, and the fertile farmlands of the Shephelah, does the land seem to hold any promise
at all. And yet, to both Jew and Arab, to both Christian and Moslem, it is just this land,
hardly larger than the state of Illinois, that is viewed with reverence as . . .
The Promised Land
Religious Associations
In truth, it is not so much the
land itself, although with irrigation and hard work it can be made extremely fruitful, as
at the many kibbutzes, or again in the moshavs of the Negev; nor is it the mineral wealth
of the potash factories around the Dead Sea at Sodom or the copper mines of Timnah; but it
is religious associations that have made this a hallowed land.
The heartbeat of this religious
fervor is the golden city of Jerusalem itself. The Mosque of Omar, and the silver-domed
Mosque of El Aqsah, place Jerusalem as one of the most holy cities for the sons of Islam.
The tomb of David and the citadel
which bears his name recall a bygone glory for the Israelis. The faithful orthodox of
Jewry, rocking in earnest prayer at the Western Wall, rejoice that their prayer has
finally been answered--that at last it is "This Year in Jerusalem."
For the Christians it is no less
so. The sacred associations with the life of Jesus of Nazareth, especially in Jerusalem,
make this holy ground for the followers of the Galileean also. It was here that Jesus died
and it was here, whether in the tomb enshrined in the ornate Church of the Holy Sepulcher
or in the simple, yet lovely, garden tomb adjacent to Gordon's Calvary, that Jesus was
buried. And it was here, according to the New Testament scriptures, that Jesus rose again
on the third day.
Thus it is little wonder that
this ancient land is the most hotly-contested piece of real estate on the globe today.
Mid-East Tensions
Current Mid-East tensions can be
readily traced to the formation of the State of Israel on May 15, 1948 and the subsequent
hostility of its Arab and Palestinian neighbors, many of them uprooted from their
ancestral homes. It is this hostility which erupted in the repetitive border wars of 1948,
1956, 1967, 1978, and the almost continuous skirmishes ever since.
The past century has seen two
very different sets of claims and counter-claims upon the land. First, there has been the
conflict between the Israelis and the Arabs in a search for borders that both sides would
consider mutually secure and defensible. Second, there is the related debate between the
Jews and the Palestinians as to who has a right to live on the land in the first place.
The first question is one of
politics and security, while the second is one of history. Let us examine the second
question more closely.
The discussion goes something
like this. The Palestinian charges, "We have been uprooted from a land that our
ancestors have lived on for over a thousand years."
The Israeli counters, "Yes,
but before that, our ancestors occupied this land for over two thousand years."
"But," the Palestinian
is quick with his counter-claim, "before that, our ancestors dwelt in this land as
its original inhabitants." The Palestinian goes on to explain that his heritage is
different from that of his Arab neighbor. While the Arabs are blood relatives of the
Israelis, both being a Semitic people who trace their roots back to Abraham, the
Palestinian claim is to Hamitic stock, descendants from the original Canaanites from which
the land received its name, "the land of Canaan."
Biblical Borders
For many Israelis there is
another significant factor in the conflicting claims for the land of the Middle East.
Their position is that the proper borders of Israel should be nothing less-and nothing
more-than those borders spelled out in the Old Testament as in the inheritance of the
Jewish people.
To us, as Christians, this
position seems eminently correct. This is the position we wish to examine in our
investigation of the Bible and its promises considering the division of the land. These
promises are not for Jews only but for Arabs and Palestinians as well.
This Land is Mine!
The first text deals with the
basic question as to what right anyone has--and if anyone, who?--to arbitrarily partition
the land at all. The text is found in Leviticus 25:23. It deals with the jubilee law of
ancient Israel, whereby purchasers of property were to return the land to the original
possessors every fifty years. The text reads: "The land shall not be sold forever;
for the land is mine: for ye are strangers and sojourners with me."
The basis of the entire matter,
then, lies in the fact that, not only the ancient land of Canaan, but the land of the
whole world as well, belongs to God who created it, and he has a right to divide it as he
chooses.
A second foundation scripture
deals with the intent of God in apportioning the real estate of the earth among all the
nations of the world. This text is found in Deuteronomy 32:8, 9 and reads: "When the
Most High divided to the nations their inheritance, when he separated the sons of Adam, he
set the bounds of the people according to the number of the children of Israel. For the
Lord's portion is his people, Jacob is the lot of his inheritance."
We admit that the Old Testament
does have a bias toward Israel. After all, we read in Amos 3:2 that God says of Israel,
"You only have I known of all the families of the earth." The reason for this
bias, this favoritism of God toward one nation over another, is the unique relationship
which the nation of Israel possessed with God--a covenant relationship.
A Covenant with Abraham
In order to trace this covenant
we need to turn to the twelfth chapter of the book of Genesis. There we find God
approaching a man named Abram in the far-off city of Ur, in the land of the Chaldees.
Abram is told to leave his land and journey to another, one which God would show him.
There God would make a covenant, or pact, with him.
In obedience, Abram and his
family trekked to the north and west, following the fertile crescent of the mighty
Euphrates, to the country of Haran. This was where Abram's father, Terah, became ill and
died. From thence it was that Abram and his entourage journeyed south, through the country
of the Hittities into the land of Canaan.
It was there, close to Shechem,
the modern Nablus on what the Arabs call the West Bank, that Abram first settled in the
promised land. Further wanderings took him as far as Egypt, and then back to Canaan: first
to Bethel, north of Jerusalem, then finally to Mamre, in the vicinity of modern Hebron. It
was there that God fulfilled his promise and made a covenant with him. The covenant is
recorded for us in Genesis 15:7, "I am the LORD that brought thee out of Ur of the
Chaldees, to give thee this land to inherit it."
Verses 8 through 12 of this
chapter are a historical record of the various animal sacrifices Abram offered to ratify
the covenant. Then, in verses 13 through 15, Abram is informed that he would not
personally inherit the land at that time. In verse 16 he is told that his descendants
would be the ones to come into possession of the land in the fourth generation--in the
time of Moses and Joshua. After sealing this covenant, in verse 17, God outlined the scope
of the promised land in verses 18 through 21: "In the same day the LORD made a
covenant with Abram, saying, 'Unto thy seed have I given this land, from the River of
Egypt unto the Great River, the River Euphrates: the Kenites, and the Kenizzites, and the
Kadmonites, and the Hittites, and the Perizzites, and the Rephaims, and the Amorites, and
the Canaanites, and the Girgashites, and the Jebusites.'"
Notice that the boundaries of the
area promised to the descendants of Abram are defined in two distinctly different
manners--first, by a geographical description; and second, by naming the inhabitants of
the land at that time.
Let us note first the geographic
description. Two specific borders are mentioned--the River of Egypt and the River
Euphrates. Bible scholars are divided in their opinion as to the identity of the River of
Egypt. Some say that it is the main trunk of the Nile. Others claim it to be the
easternmost branch of the Nile near Suez. Still others argue for the Wadi el Arish, now a
dry river bed in the eastern Sinai.
We cite six reasons, which
include every use of the term "River of Egypt," for the belief that the
description is of the Wadi el Arish.
The River of Egypt
In I Chronicles 13:5, 2
Chronicles 7:8, and I Kings 8:65, the River of Egypt is used to describe a boundary of
Israel during the reigns of David and Solomon. No scholar holds that, historically, the
kingdom of either David or Solomon included the entirety of the Sinai peninsula.
The River of Egypt is used as a
southern boundary of Israel in Numbers 34:3-5 and Joshua 15:4, 47, where it is closely
allied with the geographic sites of Gaza, Kadesh, and the southern end of the Dead Sea.
All of these points are far removed from either the Suez or the Nile, but lie in proximity
or on a line with the Wadi el Arish. It is interesting to note, in this connection, that
the Joshua 15:4 reference mentions in connection with "Azmon," a site that has
been tentatively identified by archaeologists with a recent dig in the area of el Arish.
The river is mentioned in Isaiah
27:12. The Septuagint version of this text, translated in the days before our common era,
utilizes the word "Rhinocororua," a name archaeologically identified with the
site of el Arish itself.
In 2 Kings 24:7 we have a passage
that refers to Jehoiakim, a king of Judah defeated by Nebuchadnezzar in the sixth century
before the common era. This text reads: "And the king of Egypt came not again any
more out of his land: for the King of Babylon had taken from the River of Egypt unto the
River Euphrates all that pertained to the king of Egypt." It is a well documented
fact that the Babylonian empire, at this time, did not control the Sinai peninsula.
The scriptures say that the
immediate descendants of Abram, before inheriting the land, would go through a period of
affliction in "a land that was not theirs" (Gen. 15:13). This alludes to the
land of Goshen, on the east bank of the Nile river in Egypt. Therefore, if the River of
Egypt referred to the Nile, they would not have been in "a land that was not
theirs." Rather, in that case, they would have been afflicted in a land that would
eventually become their rightful inheritance.
In the Genesis 15 text,
referred to earlier, the "River of Egypt" is contrasted with "the great
river, the Euphrates." Great as is the mighty Euphrates, it cannot be compared with
the mighty Nile for greatness. The Nile is second only to the Amazon as the longest river
in the world. Therefore, since the River of Egypt lacks the appellation "great,"
it must not be as great as the Euphrates, and therefore not the Nile. In fact, as the
accompanying chart shows, the Nile is over twice as long as the Euphrates.
Great Rivers of the World
length in miles
| Amazon 3854 |
Nile 3600 |
Mississippi 3486 |
| Yangtze 3200 |
Euphrates 1716 |
Tigris 1070 |
The Euphrates on the North
The river Euphrates can be shown
from the Scriptures to be a northern, and not an eastern, border of Israel.
The River of Egypt mentioned in
Numbers 34:3-5 and Joshua 15:47 is given as the southern border. The contrast to be
anticipated, therefore, is that in the second phrase in Genesis 15:18-21, the river
Euphrates would be the northern boundary.
Another description of the
promised land is found in Exodus 23:31. Here it is described as extending (east to west)
from the Red Sea to the Sea of the Philistines (the Mediterranean); and (south to north)
from "the desert" (the Negev) to "the River," the Euphrates.
In another description of the
promised land (Deut. 11:24) the river Euphrates is listed in conjunction with Lebanon, to
Israel's north, and not to one of the countries that lie to the east of Israel.
In Genesis 12, Abraham was to
leave Ur of the Chaldees and journey to the promised land. Ur is located just west of the
Euphrates, near the Persian Gulf, in the modern country of Iraq. If the Euphrates was
meant to describe an eastern border of Israel, Ur would already be within the
"promised land" and there would have been no necessity to "journey" to
it.
A Complete Description
The most complete description of
the land which Abram's seed was to inherit is found in Deuteronomy 1:7, 8:
"Turn you, and take your
journey, and go to the mount of the Amorites [the Nebo ridge on the east bank of the
Jordan], and unto all the places nigh thereunto [the Jordan valley, east of the river
itself], in the plain[in Hebrew, Arabah, the Great Rift of the Jordan valley south of the
Dead Sea], and in the hills [the Judean hills], and in the vale [in Hebrew, Shephelah,
lying between the coastal plain and the Judean hills], and in the south [the Negev], and
by the seaside [the Mediterranean coastal plain], to the land of the Canaanites
[particularly the Plain of Sharon and the Jezreel Valley], and unto Lebanon [in the
north--How far north?], unto the Great River, the River Euphrates. Behold, I have set the
land before you: go in and possess the land which the Lord sware unto your fathers,
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to give unto them and to their seed after them."
Nations to be Dispossessed
| Genesis
15:19-21 |
Joshua
3:10 |
| Kenites |
Hittites |
| Kenizzites |
Perizzites |
| Kadmonites |
Amorites |
| Hittites |
Canaanites |
| Perizzites |
Girgashites |
| Rephaim |
Jebusites |
| Amorites |
Hivites |
| Canaanites |
|
| Girgashites |
|
| Jenusites |
|
Ten Nations Dispossessed |
Next, note the
boundaries of the land as described by the list of inhabitants then living there. These
nations, which Israel was to conquer, are listed many times. We will just cite two of
them.
Ten enemy nations are listed in
Genesis 15:19-21, while Joshua catalogs only seven of them. The harmony between these two
accounts is simple. The Genesis record covers all the tribes whose land Israel was to
inherit, while the record in Joshua, written years later, omits the names of those nations
which had already been conquered.
Let us locate these early peoples
on a map of Palestine. We will deal first only with those who are listed in the Genesis
account and note that they are either located in the Negev or east of the Jordan river,
territory which Israel had already made secure before the text given in the book of
Joshua.
The Kenites are mentioned first.
They were iron workers, living in the northern Sinai, near present-day Eilat. It was the
Kenites who first mined copper at the spot known today as "King Solomon's
mines."
The Kenizzites were hunters who
reputedly lived on the western slopes of Mount Seir, in the Wadi Arabah. This is due south
of the Dead Sea, close to the famous red rock city of Petra.
The location of the Kadmonites is
not definitely known. However, since their name means "easterners," it can be
presumed that they lived east of the Jordan River. Tradition locates them at the foot of
Mount Hermon in the Golan Heights.
The Rephaim were large men,
giants as it were. According to Deuteronomy 3:11 they lived in Bashan, which lies east of
the Jordan, south of the Sea of Galilee.
The next grouping we want to
examine are those names found in both the lists of Genesis and the book of Joshua. There
are six tribes in this list, all located west of the Jordan River, from the Negev on the
south through Lebanon on the north.
First, in this grouping, are the
Hittites. There are two ancient people, both known as Hittites. One of these lived in the
far north, in the present day country of Turkey. These are the ancestors of the current
Armenians. However, the Hittites referred to in the Genesis record are more probably the
people known as the "Hurrians" by archaeologists. They dwelt in Lebanon, from
the Mediterranean to the slopes of Mount Hermon.
The Perizzites are believed to
have lived in the Shephelah, east of the Philistines of the Gaza strip, but to the west of
modern Hebron.
While the Genesis account locates
the Amorites in the area of Gebron and Mamre, they are also found just north of the Arnon
river in the Trans-Jordan. It was here that the Israelite troops, under the command of
Moses, made the first approach to the promised land and engaged in battle with Sihon, king
of Heshbon. Heshbon has been recently excavated by archaeologists and lies between Amman
and Madaba in today's country of Jordan.
The Canaanites lived in the
fertile farming area of the Plain of Sharon and the Valley of Jezreel. Their famous
fortress city was Megiddo, whose location is undisputed today by archaeologists.
We are informed in Joshua 24:11
that the Girgashites dwelt west of Jordan, presumably in the Jordan valley itself,
northward from Jericho to the city of Adam.
Finally we come to the Jebusites,
the early occupants of the city of Jerusalem. So strongly had they fortified this city, in
fact, that it held out against the Israelites for nearly 500 years before being captured
for David by his nephews, Joab and Abishai.
There is one more tribe to
consider--the Hivites, who, while not listed in the Genesis account, are named in the book
of Joshua. They were probably omitted in Genesis because they were not recognized as a
people in Abram's time but sprung up shortly thereafter.
Two generations later, however,
they evidently had come into existence and were located in the so-called "West
Bank" area, at ancient Shechem, modern Nablus. It was a Hivite, a resident of this
town, who defiled Dinah, the daughter of Jacob, in one of the uglier incidents in biblical
history (Gen. 34).
From the map on page 7 it can be
clearly seen that the combined area of these eleven nations is the very same area
encompassed in the geographic description of the promised land--a second witness to the
title deed of the land which Israel was to inherit.
The History of Israel
It is also significant that the
land was theirs by conquest, taken as spoils of war (Deut. 2:31). However, much history
has elapsed since Joshua's day. After the initial conquest, Israel soon became tributary
to such nations as the Philistines, Midianites, and others during the 450-year period of
the judges.
In the early days of their kings,
under David and Solomon, their power reached its zenith, encompassing most of the promised
land of Genesis 15. But this did not last long. The kingdom was soon divided--ten tribes
breaking off to form the nations of Israel, while two, Judah and Benjamin, maintained the
kingdom of Judah. During these years both their power and their territory waned.
Finally, the last king of Judah,
Zedekiah, was dethroned by Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, and the following judgment was
pronounced against him in Ezekiel 21:25-27: "And thou, profane wicked prince of
Israel, whose day is come, when iniquity shall have an end, Thus saith the Lord God;
Remove the diadem, take off the crown: this shall not be the same: exalt him that is low,
abase him that is high. I will overturn, overturn, overturn, it; and it shall be no more,
until he come whose right it is; and I will give it him."
Jubilee Law Ends
This was to become a captivity
that would directly relate to the land itself, whereas prior defeats only made Israel a
tributary people while remaining on their land. This captivity nullified the very contract
under which they occupied the land--the Jubilee arrangement. That contract, having been
broken, was declared null and void. In this regard, note Ezekiel 7:12, 13: "The time
is come, the day draweth near: let not the buyer rejoice, nor the seller mourn: for wrath
is upon all the multitude thereof. For the seller shall not return to that which is sold,
although they were yet alive: for the vision is touching the whole multitude thereof,
which shall not return; neither shall any strengthen himself in the iniquity of his
life."
Although the Jews were not to
return to their lands under the same arrangements as before, the land still remained in
the possession of God. Only now there were to be new lease-holders--the Gentile nations.
In steady procession, they relentlessly paraded through and conquered the land--the
Babylonians, the Medes, the Persians, the Greeks, the Romans, the Crusaders, the Franks,
and the Turks.
There were brief recurrences of
hope among the Jewish people, among which was the return under Nehemiah with the
subsequent rebuilding of their temple under Zerubbabel. Later came the reform of the
Macabees, but never did they regain the glory that they had before--and never full
independent national existence. Finally, from A.D. 69 to 73, under the strong hand of the
Roman general, and later Emperor, Titus; and even more under the sheer power of Hadrian
and Severus, who put down the Bar Kokhba rebellion some 65 years later, the Diaspora
became a harsh reality for the Jewish people.
Christians were quick to point to
the Diaspora as a fulfillment of the prophecy of Jesus against Israel, recorded in Matthew
23:37, 38:
A Parade of Conquerors
| Babylon |
625 BC |
| Medo-Persia |
536 BC |
| Ptolemais |
270 BC |
| Hasmoneans |
165 BC |
| Rome |
66 BC |
| Byzantium |
324 AD |
| Muslims |
636 AD |
| Crusaders |
1099 AD |
| Saladin |
1187 AD |
| Franks |
1229 AD |
| Mamluks |
1258 AD |
| Tartars |
1291AD |
| Ottomans |
1516 AD |
| Britain |
1878 AD |
"O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are
sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen
gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not! Behold, your house is left unto
you desolate."
Paul Preaches Favor to Israel
Does this pronouncement of Jesus
make the promises of the Old Testament of none effect? Not according to the great
Christian writer, the Apostle Paul. Note his words in Romans 11: "I say then, Hath
God cast away his people? God forbid. For I also am an Israelite, of the seed of Abraham,
of the tribe of Benjamin. God hath not cast away his people which he foreknew.--Verses 1
and 2
"Now if the fall of them be
the riches of the world, and the diminishing of them the riches of the Gentiles; how much
more their fulness.--Verse 12
"For if the casting away of
them be the reconciling of the world, what shall the receiving of them be, but life from
the dead?--Verse 15
"For I would not, brethren,
that ye should be ignorant of this mystery, lest ye should be wise in your own conceits;
that blindness in part is happened to Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come
in. And so all Israel shall be saved: as it is written, There shall come out of Sion the
Deliver, and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob: For this is my covenant unto them,
when I shall take away their sins. As concerning the gospel, they are enemies for your
sakes: but as touching the election, they are beloved for the fathers' sakes. For the
gifts and calling of God are without repentance. For as ye in time past have not believed
God, yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief: Even so have these also now not
believed, that through your mercy they also may obtain mercy. For God hath concluded them
all in unbelief, that he might have mercy upon all. O the depth of the riches both of the
wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding
out!"--Verses 25 to 33
Israel Yet to Inherit Land
Notice that the central core of
Paul's argument is in verse 15: "for the gifts and calling of God are without
repentance." This means that once God makes a promise, he cannot and will not retract
his word.
As we have seen in Genesis 15,
God made a covenant promise that the seed of Abraham would inherit a certain portion of
land.
Add to this the testimony of the
Christian martyr, Stephen, as found in Acts 7:5, "And he [God] gave him [Abraham]
none inheritance in it, no, not so much as to set his foot on: yet he promised that he
would give it to him for a possession, and to his seed after him when as yet he had no
child."
If, therefore, the land was
promised to Abraham's seed; and if it has not yet been given to that seed; and if the
gifts and calling of God are without repentance; then, of necessity, it follows that it
will yet, at some future point in time, be given to the seed of Abraham, the people of
Israel, for a possession.
When Will Israel Inherit the Land?
But when? When will be the
fulfillment of these promises? When will Israel inherit the land? There are two lines of
Bible prophecy that address this issue. A useful way to understand these avenues of
prophetic evidence is to view the expulsion of Israel from their land--the "promised
land"--as a prison sentence. If we can determine the length of that sentence and when
it began, we can determine the date at which we might expect them to be released from that
sentence.
The Times of the Gentiles
The first of these lines of
time-prophecy goes back to the days of the last king of Judah, King Zedekiah, and his
overthrow by Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon. We earlier noted that the lease arrangement
which God had made with Israel was transferred at that time to the Gentile nations. This
appears to be the background for the statement of Jesus of Nazareth in Luke
21:24,"Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles, until the times of the
Gentiles be fulfilled."
Note the expression "times
of the Gentiles." How many "times"? How long is each "time"? When
God first established his law with Israel, in the days of Moses, he promised them certain
blessings for compliance with that law, and certain punishments for infractions of it.
Some of these punishments are recorded in Leviticus 26. A repeated phrase in this chapter
is: "I will punish you seven times for your sins."
The word "times" is
frequently translated "year" in the Bible. In the book of Revelation, chapters
11 and 12, it can be demonstrated that the term can encompass a period of 360
"prophetic" days, each day signifying an actual year of elapsed time (Ezek.
4:6). In the Revelation chapter, the same time period is listed as "1260 days"
(11:3), "42 months" (11:2), and a "time, times, and half a time"
(12:14). This latter expression is idiomatic for three and a half years.
How long is a "time"?
| Revelation 11:2 |
42 Months |
| Revelation 11:3 |
1260 Days |
| Revelation 12:14 |
3 1/2 Years * |
|
* Time,
times,
and half a time |
When we multiply
this scriptural length of a "time," 360 years, times the number 7, as suggested
in Leviticus 26, we arrive at a punishment period of 2,520 years.
Thus: 360 Years x 7 Times
2,520 Years
If this were to begin at the time
of the dethroning of Zedekiah by Nebuchadnezzar in B.C. 606, it would point directly to
the year 1914, the beginning of World War I.
Thus: 2,520 Years - 606
B.C. = 1914 A.D.
Israel's Double
The second biblical time line is
suggested in Zechariah 9:12, "Turn you to the strong hold, ye prisoners of hope; even
today do I declare that I will render double unto thee." The word translated
"double" in this text has the meaning of "doubling," as of a sheet of
paper folded in half. In other words, it is descriptive of a duplicate, or like amount.
The suggestion is that Israel would have a period of chastisement equal in length to her
period of favor.
But where does this period of
favor begin? What is the focal point of its "fold," its middle, from which we
can date the period of disfavor?
The beginning of the period is
easy to trace. We find that the first time the "twelve tribes of Israel" are
described as a nation is at the death of Jacob in B.C. 1812, as recorded in Genesis 49:28.
It is from this point that they are considered a nation, and not just an extended family.
To the Christian mind, it is just
as easy to date the turning point as being that marked in the Zechariah reference. Just
three verses earlier, in Zechariah 9:9, the "day" in which he declared that he
would "render double" unto them was the very day in which Jesus rode into
Jerusalem on an ass. This was four days before his death, in the year A.D. 33. It was on
that very day that he uttered the prophetic words of the desolation of Jerusalem, noted
earlier in our study (Matt. 23:37, 38). This, we believe, is the turning point between
Israel's favor and disfavor from God.
The period from B.C. 1812 to the
year A.D. 33 is 1,845 years. An equal portion from that point would point forward to the
year A.D. 1878, a most significant date.
It was in 1878, at the ending of
the Turko-Russian war, that the Berlin Congress of Nations opened the land of Palestine to
Jewish colonization for the first time since the Diaspora. It was in 1878 that the first
Jewish colony, Petach Tikvah, a name aptly meaning "Gate of Hope," was
established by Jewish refugees from Russia.
It was in 1878, according to
David Ben Gurion, that the first Aliyah, or wave of immigration, can be dated.
Another View
But this "double" can
be looked at from a still different standpoint. A Jewish scholar might well say that the
Diaspora did not really fully begin until the armies of Titus began to amass against
Israel and drive them out of their homeland in the year A.D. 68.
If we take this date, A.D. 68, as
the turning point of this double, the period of favor stretches out to 1,880 years. An
equal period of 1,880 years, going forward from the year A.D. 68 brings one to the
spectacular date of A.D. 1948, the very year in which the State of Israel became a
reality.
Look at the events of this
past century:
In 1878 we have the
three events previously noted--the Berlin Congress of Nations, the establishment of the
first Jewish colony at Petach Tikvah, and the onset of the first wave of immigration.
In 1896 Theodor Herzl of
Vienna called the First Zionist Congress to issue a call to Jewry everywhere to return to
their ancestral homeland.
In 1917 the government
of Great Britain, through the intervention of the Jewish chemist, Dr. Chaim Weizmann,
issued the Balfour Declaration, placing His Majesty's government of England on record as
favoring the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine.
In 1948, following the
passage of a United Nations' resolution, the State of Israel was formally proclaimed.
Thus, in steady progressive
steps, Israel has slowly regained her place among the nations which was promised to her by
God.
Up to now we have looked at the
promise of land in the Bible for the Jewish people. What about the claims of the Arabs and
the Palestinians? Are they to be left without a homeland of their own?
God's Promises to the Arabs
The claims of the Palestinians
and those of the Arabs are very different, and thus we will treat them separately. We will
first look at the promises of God recorded in the Bible for the Arabs. Most of the Arab
nations have sprung from one of four biblical ancestors--Ishmael, Esau, Moab, and Ammon.
In Genesis 16:12 we read about
Ishmael, the older brother of Isaac, and the son of Abraham by Sarah's bond-maid, Hagar.
There is a positive promise made concerning his descendants: "He shall dwell in the
presence of all his brethren."
This implies a shared inheritance
with the children of Abraham through Isaac--the people of Israel. Since the main
descendants of Ishmael today are represented by the Bedouin tribes, who are already living
in Israel, this promise seems peculiarly fitting.
There are further promises for
Ishmael in the Bible. "As for Ishmael, I have heard thee: Behold, I have blessed him
and will make him fruitful, and will multiply him exceedingly; twelve princes shall he
beget, and I will make him a great nation" (Gen. 17:20). Again, "And also of the
son of the bondwoman will I make a nation, because he is thy seed" (Gen. 21:13). And
yet again, "I will make him a great nation" (Gen. 21:18). Similarly of the
descendants of Esau it is written that God has given them a distinct territorial grant of
their own. We read of this in Deuteronomy 2:5, "Meddle not with them [the Edomites,
sons of Esau, ancestors of many of today's Arabs]; for I will not give you of their land,
no, not so much as a foot breadth; because I have given Mount Seir unto Esau for a
possession."
The territory of Mount Seir is in
present-day Jordan, between the Moabite territory at the southern end of the Dead Sea,
southward to Aqaba, on the Red Sea.
The other two noted ancestors of
the Arab tribes were Moab and Ammon, the children of Abraham's nephew, Lot.
Of the former of these we read in
Deuteronomy 2:9, "Distress not the Moabites, neither contend with them in battle: for
I will not give thee of their land for a possession; because I have given Ar unto the
children of Lot for a possession."
"Ar," meaning
"mountain," or "mountain range," is well identified with the mountain
range to the east of the Dead Sea, just south of the Arnon river. This is to be a
possession forever for the children of Lot.
Likewise, of Ammon, we read in
Deuteronomy 2:19, "When thou comest nigh over against the children of Ammon, distress
them not, nor meddle with them: for I will not give thee of the land of the children of
Ammon any possession; because I have given it unto the children of Lot for a
possession."
This "land of Ammon" is
the western portion of present day Jordan. Indeed, Jordan's capital city, Amman, takes its
name from this ancient heritage of the children of Ammon.
Thus, with the Ishmaelites (the
Bedouins) living amongst the Israelis; and with provision for the other Arabs--whether
they descended from Moab, Ammon, or Esau--to the east of the Dead Sea, the Bible lays the
groundwork for a peaceful solution with equality toward all--both for Jews and for Arabs.
The Palestinians
But what will be the inheritance
of the Palestinians? That is still another question. This is particularly so if their own
claim be true that they are not genetically Arabs, but Canaanites, of Hamitic stock. If
that claim is true, it would seem to nullify any title deed to the land of Palestine, for
the Canaanites were one of the people the Israelites were to dispossess in order to
inherit the promised land.
Yet, some say that their
ancestral claim to being Canaanites is a little faulty, that there is good genealogical
reason to identify them, not with the Canaanites, but with their cousins, the Philistines,
from whence Palestine derives its name. Genesis 10:14 substantiates this relationship.
If this is the case, their claim
to Palestine as an ancestral homeland is also flawed. Although the Philistines were not
listed as one of the tribes which Israel was to dispossess in order to occupy the promised
land, their land was considered as being attached to that of the Canaanites.
In this regard, note the
testimony of Joshua 13:2, 3: ,I."This is the land that yet remaineth: all the borders
of the Philistines, and all Geshuri, from Sihor, which is before Egypt, even unto the
borders of Ekron northward, which is counted to the Canaanite: five lords of the
Philistines; the Gazathites, and the Ashdodites, the Eshkalonites, the Gittites, and the
Ekronites; also the Avites."
It is important in this text to
note the specific mention of the Gazathities, inhabitants of the Gaza strip. This is one
of the hotly contested pieces of land in controversy today. Here it is specifically listed
as part of the eventual inheritance of Israel.
Where are the Palestinians to go?
The Bible is not specific, but it seems logical that they would return to the lands where
they originated--the Mediterranean isles of Crete and Cyprus, and the coasts of Lebanon.
In any event, we can be assured that God will provide adequate homelands for all the
peoples of the world.
Life from the Dead
But the most fascinating event in
connection with the phenomenon presently occurring in the Middle East is of far greater
consequence than any of the points we have noted up to now. Read again the Apostle Paul's
words, quoted earlier, from Romans 11:15, "What shall the receiving of them [Israel]
be, but life from the dead."
The return of Israel to her
ancient homeland is closely linked scripturally with the greater biblical promise that the
entire world of mankind will return to life from the captivity in the prison house of
death where they have been held.
Their return will be the answer
to the Christian's oft-repeated prayer: "Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth
as it is in heaven."
This is the kingdom that will
replace war with peace, as we read in Micah 4:3: "And he shall judge among many
people, and rebuke strong nations afar off; and they shall beat their swords into
plowshares, and their spears into pruninghooks; nation shall not lift up a sword against
nation, neither shall they learn war any more."
This is the kingdom that will
replace sickness with health, as we read in Isaiah 35:5, 6: "Then the eyes of the
blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped. Then shall the lame
man leap as an hart, and the tongue of the dumb sing: for in the wilderness shall waters
break out, and streams in the desert."
This is the kingdom that will
replace poverty with security. Micah 4:4 reads: "But they shall sit every man under
his vine and under his fig tree; and none shall make them afraid: for the mouth of the
Lord of hosts hath spoken it." This is the kingdom that will replace death with life
and sadness with gladness. Revelation 21:4 predicts: "And God shall wipe away all
tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying,
neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away."
This Generation
The nearness of this kingdom is
noted in what has come to be known as "The Lord's Great Prophecy." Using the
symbol of Israel as a fig tree, Jesus says in Luke 21:29-31: "Behold the fig tree,
and all the trees; when they now shoot forth, ye see and know of your own selves that
summer is now nigh at hand. So likewise ye, when ye see these things come to pass, know ye
that the kingdom of God is nigh at hand."
And then he adds, more
specifically, in verse 32, "Verily I say unto you, this generation shall not pass
away, till all be fulfilled."
May it yet be that the generation
which has seen the establishment of the nation of Israel in 1948 will be the same
generation which finally witnesses the fruition of every Christian's prayer, of every
Jewish dream, and the desire of all men--the establishment of God's kingdom of peace and
righteousness upon the whole earth. This kingdom will bring peace and security, not only
to Jew and to Arab, but to all men. For this reason we should all join with fervor in the
prayer of David found in Psalm 122:6:
"Pray for the
peace of Jerusalem: they shall prosper that love thee."

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