OK, you've bought a house and moved into a new neighborhood. Actually,
you used to live in this very area, but events caused you to move away,
and now you're back. It's a nice, albeit modest, not fancy or highbrow
neighborhood, and you're looking forward to really settling in and
getting to know your neighbors.
But before you've even unpacked, you come to realize that your
neighbors don't want you there. When they're unable to keep you from
moving in, a violent zealot next door proclaims that he will never
accept your presence, no matter what concessions you offer or what
friendly overtures you make.
Across the street lives a real fanatic, known to make and throw bombs,
who declares he hopes your entire extended family moves in – because
that "will save us the trouble of going after them wherever they are
worldwide."
Just up the block, a rich religious extremist has been buying weapons
and providing them to your other neighbors, announcing that your home
"must be wiped off the map"; and in his garage, he's believed to be
assembling an ominous-looking weapon that he might use to blow your
home to smithereens.
And of course, there's the house just behind you. Its owner declares
he, too, wants you completely destroyed – but not until you are
"humiliated and degraded first."
Rather inhospitable, isn't it? But wait – there's also the dilettante
from a gated community in the suburbs who swoops in to tell you that
the conflict is really your fault, that he finds it unseemly when you
defend your family and your property, and that you ought to solve the
problems by just giving your neighbors what they want, and moving away.
Welcome to Israel today.
And who are these "neighbors" I just described? The Palestinian
Authority, Hamas, Fatah and the terrorist group Hezbollah have made it
abundantly plain they intend never to accept the presence of Israel in
their "neighborhood," no matter what or how long it takes to drive the
Jewish state out. Hamas political chieftain Khaled Mash'al has
declared, "Before Israel dies, it must be humiliated and degraded." And
Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Hezbollah, announced, "If the Jews
all gather in Israel, it will save us the trouble of going after them
worldwide." And nobody could speak for the whole neighborhood more
articulately and succinctly than the charming, diminutive Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, president of Iran: "Israel must be wiped off the map."
Hardly a "welcome wagon." But Israel isn't moving away; far from it. In
fact, I know a number of American Jews who are selling all their assets
in this country and moving, with their families, to Israel right now.
Other Christians and I have worked with Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein and his
Fellowship of Christians and Jews, in its "Wings of Eagles" project,
bringing 300,000 Jews emotionally and gratefully into Israel from
former Iron Curtain countries to settle their families and their
futures in the neighborhood.
After all, any believer of the Bible and any spiritual descendent of
Abraham, knows that Jehovah God promised that little plot of ground to
his descendents, and repeated that very same promise to Isaac and
Jacob. That was, and is, a "trust deed," conferred to a people humble
by earthly standards. And especially since there never was a republic
or nation or government of "Palestinians," that trust deed is still in
effect. So there is absolutely no possibility that the state of Israel
will be "wiped off the map."
My wife and I, always deeply moved by the experience of literally
"walking into the pages of the Bible," are still tingling from our
umpteenth visit to Israel. This time we accompanied 37 of our family
and friends. We never felt unsafe; everybody we met was welcoming and
hospitable, cheery and optimistic. The economy is booming, and the
prevailing spirit seems indomitable. We were prohibited from setting
foot inside Bethlehem, which was a major disappointment; this was
because the whole area had been turned over to the Palestinian
Authority, after the Church of the Nativity had been barricaded and
occupied for 38 days in 2002 by terrorist members of the PLO and Al
Aqsa Brigade, seeking refuge from Israel's IDF. But the historic
residents of the land couldn't have been more generous, or more
seemingly secure.
I can hardly imagine any of us Americans, blessed and protected as we
have been for so long, wanting to keep living under the constant threat
and tension and pressure in that "neighborhood." But we felt everywhere
among the Israelis the sense, the confidence, that can only come from
the assurance of a divine right, an irrevocable "trust deed" that
guarantees their existence in their land.
It's not necessarily a religious belief with many, since modern Israel
is surprisingly "secular" in many quarters; but whether there's a
biblical connection or not, there's a phenomenal determination that
nobody – nobody nor anything – will ever displace them again. This is
their neighborhood, their home.
Hopefully, their neighbors will eventually become just that –
neighbors. Good neighbors.
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