The wild-dove hath her
nest-the fox his cave. Mankind their country--Israel but the grave.
-Lord Byron
from "Oh! weep for those" in Hebrew Melodies
In light of the situation in the Middle
East, the poet's words are hauntingly prophetic. Not only do they
carry refrains from Israel's ancient prophets, but they echo the
Holocaust, pogroms, and the perpetual anti-Semitism that drives
legions to seek the annihilation of Israel and the Jewish people.
Politicians may thrust and parry over
the future size, shape, and disposition of the State of Israel, but
few realize the magnitude of the compromises they are willing to
make for what they conceive to be peace. In reality, Israel has only
two viable considerations: survival, through sufficient
determination and muscle to ward off attacks that are most certain
to come, or surrender, to again wander as a dispossessed
and dispersed people in an increasingly hostile international
environment.
If this sounds overly dramatic and
pessimistic, consider what Israel's enemies say. In a sermon
delivered in May 2005 and broadcast on national Palestinian
television, imam Ibrahim Mudayris said Jewish people are so evil
they cannot be subjugated like Christians. So they must be killed:
Israel is a
cancer that spreads in the body of the Islamic nation; because the
Jews are a virus similar to AIDS, from which the entire world is
suffering.... The day will come and we shall rule America, Britain,
we shall rule the entire world, except the Jews. . .The stones and
trees will want Muslims to finish off every Jew. (1)
Mudayris's venom is typical of Israel's Palestinian "peace
partners." It is incomprehensible that there are Western leaders who
think they can transform terrorists still bent on destroying Israel
into respectable, nonviolent political activists. It's as though the
rap sheets of Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade
count for nothing.
Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud
Abbas has labored long to get these terrorists to say the right
things. No matter that they refuse to lay down their arms or
relinquish their promises to blow up the peace process the moment
they become dissatisfied with the raft on concessions granted them.
No matter that they continue to stockpile weapons, keep the rockets
flying, and attempt suicide missions. In a global environment that
is long on rhetoric, short on memory, and negligent in weighing
consequences, making promises you never intend to keep seems a
priority.
Every negotiator should ponder what
would happen if the eventual were sacrificed for the immediate.
Should unwise, quick-fix concessions fail and serve to encourage
Israel's enemies to continue their attacks, frustrated international
politicians can walk away from the consequences. The Israeli
people however, must live with them.
Israel can't count on outsiders to
impose lasting, effective solutions to its problems. But it can
count on the continuing animus of its enemies, their
religious-political fanaticism, and their obsessive conviction that
to annihilate the Jewish people and their state is the supreme act
of devotion to their god, Allah.
You might ask why decision-makers in
the world of secular politics don't seem to get it, or why they
simply wish to ignore religion as a fundamental issue in the
conflict. Perhaps it is because faith plays no dominant role in
their own thinking, at least on international issues. Secularization
has so thoroughly remolded the public sector that ignoring the
obvious is the natural, politically correct thing to do.
For this reason, those who have a
more dimensional view of global realities are indispensable to the
peace process. When it comes to Israel and Islam, no group outside
the Israeli and conservative Jewish communities has a better grasp
of reality than do Zionist, evangelical Christians. However,
liberal secularists make every attempt to eliminate evangelical
perspectives and ridicule the very idea of evangelical participation
in the peace process.
Involved evangelicals understand what
is at stake and the underlying reasons why compromise in essential
matters, such as defensible borders, is unacceptable. Israel's
survival is not optional. It is not, nor will it EVER
be, for "Israel but the grave." Philosopher Eric Hoffer's words,
spoken in 1968, still ring true: I have a premonition
that will not leave me; as it goes with Israel so will it go with
all of us. Should Israel perish the holocaust will upon us.
Biblically and historically literate evangelicals know that
Hoffer was right.
Also, noteworthy was Israeli author
Victor Modecai speaking on American radio regarding the pressure
being put on Israel in every venue, He said;
You guys
(evangelical Christians) are not our (Israel's) best friends; you
are our only friends."
Again, dear reader
I beseech you, please, pray for the peace of Jerusalem, and for all
Israel!! We have so many promises from the Lord that Blessings are
in store for the ones who Bless the Apple of His eye. I highly
recommend Mr. Mordecai's book,
Christian Revival for Israel's Survival.
May God
Bless you all.
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