On May 14,
1948—the fifth day of the Hebrew month, Iyar--the Jews of Israel formally
declared the creation of Medinat Yisroel, the State of Israel. Since that date,
the world has seen Biblical prophecy come true. These prophecies are the word
of the G-d of Israel. They are ancient words, written into the human record during
a period of Jewish history that unfolded between the Exodus from Egypt and the final
prophet, Malachi, across approximately 940 years. For Jews who believe that the
words of Tanach (Jewish Bible) are from the G-d of Israel, those 940 years took
place between (app) 3,330 and 2,390 years ago.
For Jews who
do not accept the Divine origin of their Tanach, there are the Dead Sea
Scrolls. These parchments and their fragments have been dated as written between
1,900 -2,300 years ago, and their Jewish Biblical content is strikingly similar
to the Tanach texts we use today (textual differences are generally attributed
to official Jewish compilation work unfolding during (and beyond) this same
period). The modern science of dating ancient materials confirms that the word
of the G-d of Israel has been faithfully kept, copied and used by His
people—for more than 2,000 years.
Israel does
not exist today because of Western guilt for the Holocaust, as some argue.
Israel does not exist because European Jews convinced Western colonial powers
to usurp Arab land for Jews, in order to create a colonial outpost for exploiting Arab treasure, as some proclaim.
Israel exists today for one reason only:
the G-d of Israel ordained it to be—and spoke of it to all mankind
through the Jewish Tanach more than two centuries ago.
Today, Jews
return to Israel, just as G-d promised. Today,
Jews also return religiously to G-d in record numbers—just as G-d promised. These
Jews—and many Christians--understand that the Jewish Tanach is unparalleled in
its ability to predict accurately the future of the Jewish people.
The Jewish
people and its G-d are unique. No other record in human history has so
correctly predicted so many public, national events that were prophesied to
begin more than three hundred years after being written:
-The Jewish
Temple of Jerusalem would be destroyed;
-The Jewish
nation—we believe it turned out to be 80- 90 per cent, perhaps higher—would be
exiled from their land;
-during that
exile, Jews would be scattered;
-in exile,
Jews would be persecuted;
-during that
exile, the land of Israel would become and remain a desert for everyone, both
Jew and non-Jew;
-then,
per the word of the G-d of Israel, Jews would return to Israel;
-Hebrew
would be revived as the official spoken language of Israel;
-As
Jews returned, the desert would end its exilic desolation and blossom again;
-a
Jewish religious revival would bring Jews back to G-d;
-Israel
would become noteworthy among the nations of the world;
-Israel
would become a success among the nations;
-Israel
would rise like a lion before her enemies;
-As
the day of the Final Redemption draws near, nations will rise up to destroy Israel.
These predictions,
recorded more than 2,300 years ago, are now Jewish historical Truth. As these
words once prophesied future promise, they now describe our modern present.
No text of
man has ever matched such publicized predictions. No other religion has such an
ancient list of so many prophesies-come-true.
Nothing that man has done equals this record
of miracle. It is only the word of the G-d of Israel that stands triumphant—and
these words all focus on Israel.
Now, this
week, Jews in Israel celebrate the State’s 65th anniversary. More
than two hundred years ago, the great religious leader, the Gaon of Vilna,
wrote that we will all know we stand upon the threshold of our Final Redemption
when four things have happened:
-600,000
Jews live in Israel;
-Jews come
to Israel to claim and rebuild their land;
-the city of
Jerusalem is rebuilt;
-the Torah
laws of the land have been re-instituted.
Today,
Israel has six million Jews. Today, Jews claim and rebuild their land. Today,
the city of Jerusalem has been rebuilt; and today, the Torah laws of the land described
by the Gaon have been reinstituted.
As we
celebrate our 65th anniversary, we face another reality: according
to a 2012 survey, 65 per cent of Israel’s Jews believe that our Torah’s
Commandments are of Divine origin.
The Jews of
Israel are certainly far from perfect. Ritual observance is not as widespread
as many of us want it to be. But Jews in Israel, despite their imperfection, stand
today ready to praise the G-d of Israel just as readily as they stand to sing
Israel’s national anthem. We may not look it, but we are G-d’s people. We
believe in the G-d of Israel. We believe in Israel.
Happy
anniversary.
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