Showing posts with label Jonathan Feldstein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jonathan Feldstein. Show all posts

Thursday, May 16, 2019

Why This 92-Year-Old Great-Grandmother Prayed a Special Blessing Over Israel - JONATHAN FELDSTEIN CHARISMA NEWS


Marie Nachmias blesses Israel. (YouTube/Chana Jenny Weisberg)
It's no secret that the Jewish people have preserved traditions going back thousands of years. But as a relatively new country celebrating just 71 years of independence, 71 years since the restoration of Jewish sovereignty to the land that God gave to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their descendants, it's incredible to be part of the unfolding traditions of the state of Israel as we observe our independence each year.
In seven short decades, Israel has thrived and prospered as God promised. Incredibly, Israel has created many new traditions that are as in stone as the ancient ones we celebrate as well. There are several pillars to Independence Day festivities each year including: back-to-back observance of Memorial Day immediately prior to Independence Day, the international Bible competition, local and national ceremonies, Israelis lighting up the barbecue and having festive meals together often in the same spot in a national park where entire extended families gather, and more.
One of the most incredible parts of these is the state celebration that is broadcast live on national TV. It is rehearsed for weeks and full of protocol that one would ascribe to a country many times older. The prime minister and many other leaders attend. Tickets are hard to come by. Like many such ceremonies, there's music, and it ends with fireworks. But the central pillar of the national ceremony is the lighting of 12 torches representing the 12 tribes of Israel. Lighting the torch is considered one of Israel's highest civilian honors.
This year, some of those who lit a torch included the team behind sending Israel's first spacecraft to the moon, the mothers of three boys kidnapped and murdered by Palestinian Arab terrorists in 2014, the leader of the Pittsburgh Jewish community that suffered an anti-Semitic massacre several months ago, a famous movie director who donated his son's organs after a horrible traffic accident and more. But the one who captured the heart of the nation was 92-year old great-great grandmother, Marie Nachmias, who went up on stage to light her torch—and prayed.
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She began her words with the formula by which all torch lighters do, not by their title or what they've accomplished, but by their lineage, the way Jews do. "I am Marie Nachmias, the daughter of Shalom and Chana Sabach, of blessed memory."
Then the host interrupted the scripted remarks and interacted with her, live on national TV. Using the affectionate word that's a sign of respect for older women of her Tunisian origin, he said "Mamo, bless us, bless Israel."
And bless us is what she did. Marie raised her hands and eyes to heaven, and prayed from the heart, the heart of a woman whose life was never easy but always had something to give to others. While it's not common for Jews of North African decent, at 17, Marie fled Nazis hunting Jews in the streets during the German occupation of Tunisia.
As a young woman, she struggled through the early years of the state along with hundreds of thousands of others who sought refuge as Israel's population doubled in a decade. She's been privileged to live to see Israel prosper and exceed nine million residents.
"I bless the state of Israel, with all my heart, may God hear me ... may Israel continue rising and continue growing. And may no more soldiers fall in battle, oh please! With all my heart, the Jews, Arabs, Christians and Druze, so we will all be one nation, all ... created by God, may He give us peace, and next year—another 10 million Israelis!"
Then, as the host prompted her to the formal closing line that everyone says, she got flustered. Right there on national TV. It couldn't have been more real—or precious.
"And to the glory ... I am sorry, and I am nervous ... to the glory of the state of Israel!"
Interrupting her, the crowd, including the prime minister, rose and gave her a standing ovation. The spontaneous cheering increased when she blessed all of Israel, not just Jews but our Arab, Druze and Christian citizens as well. The prayer of an elderly Jewish great, great-grandmother inspired moment of national unity by breaking through traditional divisions in Israeli society.
But this was not scripted. It was genuine and embodied her life and why she was honored to light the torch to begin with.
Among the challenges she's seen included raising eight children, two of whom have died. In 1973, her son was wounded during the Yom Kippur War, which she attributes to her becoming a foster mother to dozens. "My son was in a combat unit and was wounded when he tried to rescue his commander. He was hospitalized for a long time. I took an oath and prayed that he get well, together with all the other soldiers. I vowed that if God gives me my son back, I'd be willing to do any mitzvah (commandment) or mission that is given to me," according to Ynet.
God heard her prayer, and her son recovered. He became a municipal social worker in their Galilee town. One day, he called her and said he had a little girl who needed a home. That's how it started.
The children she fostered were Jewish and Arab, with every kind of physical limitation and challenge. Eventually, she would foster children from around the country, and even from outside Israel's borders.
"They knew everywhere that she was willing to take in and raise any child. Her message was that every person was made in the image [of God], no matter their origin," her daughter Ricky told Ynet.
The committee that chose the torch-lighters singled her out as "a symbol of the immigrants who established Israeli society on a foundation of mutual solidarity and help to the needy, and of the thousands of foster families in Israel who opened their hearts to help children in crisis."
At the moment, "Mamo" was too excited to talk, her sincere prayer and the authenticity of the moment united Israelis across the nation. If it had been scripted, it couldn't have been better.
After a week with more than 1 million Israelis suffering nearly 700 rockets being fired at their communities from terrorists in Gaza, and the day before mourning nearly 28,000 Israelis whose lives were taken defending the state or in acts of terror, we all really needed a heavy dose of "Mamo" to bring us together with joy.
May God answer her prayers and bless us. 
Jonathan Feldstein was born and educated in the U.S. and immigrated to Israel in 2004. He is married and the father of six. He is president of RunforZion.com. Throughout his life and career, he has been blessed by the calling to fellowship with Christian supporters of Israel and shares experiences of living as an Orthodox Jew in Israel. He writes a regular column for Standing With Israel at charismanews.com and other prominent web sites. He can be reached at firstpersonisrael@gmail.com.
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Friday, February 8, 2019

'He Connected Christians to Israel': A Jew's Tribute to Rabbi Eckstein - JONATHAN FELDSTEIN CHARISMA NEWS

Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein's funeral (Jonathan Feldstein)
"Jonathan—call me when you can—it's important."
That's the message I woke up to Wednesday morning from a friend on the West coast. A few minutes later I learned that our mutual friend, Ossie Mills, had died suddenly at 58. We chatted about Ossie, how I got to know him through a unique project he was running to bring Christians to Israel, how it was in fact Ossie who introduced us. And we consoled one another.
Fifteen hours later, my day ended with sharing news and memories about the untimely death of another great man whose life's work was about connecting Christians to Israel. I spent the last hours of the day coordinating rides to his funeral which, according to Jewish tradition, would take place the next day.
Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein died in Jerusalem, a place that was dear to his heart and where he moved after spending most of his life in the U.S. He was an Orthodox rabbi; a devoted husband, father and grandfather; and the visionary founder of the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. Part of his being a visionary was who he was, an out-of-the-box thinker and passionate Jew and Zionist. And part of it was his being literally among the pioneers of building bridges among Christians from the Jewish side.
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For nearly four decades, Rabbi Eckstein built a means for Christians to understand a biblical imperative to express their support for Israel. Over the years, the IFCJ, under his leadership raised more than $1.3 billion. The good that has been done through this, over nearly two generations, will last for generations. That's not just platitudes, it's fact.
Countless Israelis and Jews in distant countries have benefited from Rabbi Eckstein's vision and commitment. Many never knew, and never will know, that they were helped because of him and the international network of support, the fellowship, he created. No one had a greater heart for Israel than Rabbi Eckstein, but his heart suddenly stopped this week. Filling this void will be hard.
Like many out-of-the box visionaries, Rabbi Eckstein was not a stranger to controversy. From a Jewish perspective, especially when he started, reaching out and embracing Christians was bold. If not challenging Jewish traditions as an Orthodox rabbi, he challenged Jewish discomfort and attitudes about Christians. Just two generations after the Holocaust, it was nearly unheard of for any significant public expression of care or concern about Israel and the Jewish people coming from Christians. Most Jews remained untrusting of ulterior motives, and thousands of years of history and baggage that left Jews persecuted in the name of "the church."
Rabbi Eckstein broke many of those barriers down and sowed the soil that allowed many others—Jews and Christians—to embrace the importance of mutual fellowship and support.
I am privileged to be one of those he inspired. I consider him a mentor in many ways. When God called me to be a bridge between Jews and Christians in a small church in Cleveland, Tennessee, I had never heard of Rabbi Eckstein. In fact, I didn't know there were others who were doing what he was doing, and what I had just been called to do.
Before I moved to Israel, I wrote to Rabbi Eckstein seeking his counsel. We had the privilege to connect a number of times, in Israel and different parts of the U.S. Or, I should say, I had the privilege. It was important to me that, on multiple occasions, he affirmed my work was important. Once he asked me, "Why are you not working for us?"
While I never was his employee or immediate partner, we connected often enough that I'm sure he knew that I was in fact working "for us" in the broader Jewish-Christian bridge building sense. On one of the many trips we each made throughout the U.S., we ended up spending Shabbat in the same community together. I had the dual privilege of seeing him "on," masterfully speaking with no notes, to a crowd of Jews about why what he was doing was important. And on quieter moments that weekend, we engaged in personal banter about more important things such as our family, his recently deceased father and why we each did what we were doing.
Rabbi Eckstein's fingerprints are truly all over Israel. The national media tributes to him affirm that. His presence will be felt for some time, albeit without his soothing voice. And for some time, visitors will note his joyous face upon arrival and departure in IFCJ ads though the jet-bridges at Ben Gurion Airport. A bridge builder indeed.
Why I am doing what I am doing was underscored to me today, vividly.
Around a recent unremarkable mid-50th birthday, I pondered a serious life and death issue, for me at least. Neither my father, my grandfather nor my great- grandfather lived to see 60. Each died from something different, but hereditary all the same: cancer, heart disease and anti-Semitism. I know there are things I can do to prevent the possibility of some of these, but ultimately, I believe my destiny is in God's hands.
So, on the occasion of my unremarkable birthday I prayed about what my legacy would be, whether I made it out of my 50s or not. As I learned from Rabbi Eckstein that Shabbat we spent together, the first answer to that is my family. Being blessed with a grandson now, this part of my legacy took on a new dimension.
Professionally, I have done many wonderful and even outstanding things on behalf of some good and important organizations. I spend most of my waking days working. Yet, I realized that my professional legacy would "just" be the sum of a variety of jobs. That wasn't good enough. So I started my own organization, runforzion.com, to address building bridges between Jews and Christians from a new approach. Not to duplicate or compete, and certainly not to look at Christians as a faith-based ATM with some just trying to get money out. On one of my recent trips to the U.S., after hearing about what I am doing, someone commented, "Oh, you mean like Rabbi Eckstein."
Of course I could never do what he did and would never have the hubris to think I could. But as an inheritor of the Jewish tradition that he pioneered, I have joined a growing number of Jews who actively embrace working with Christians, not to appease a boss wants to raise more money, but for the value and importance of these relations. To fellowship.
Pondering the early death of a friend and mentor the same day, the reason for my doing what I am doing has never been more evident. I don't need a statue or a street named after me to have a meaningful legacy. I just want to do good, and do good in a way that will outlive me and continue beyond my time on earth. If God gives me 67 years to do His work as he gave to Rabbi Eckstein, I want to make the most out of it. If I get that long, not only will I have spent about as much time building bridges as he did, but I know I can achieve a meaningful legacy. As he did.
Many Jews don't understand the concept of fellowship as Christians do. I pray that this will inspire more good Christians to work with and embrace people like me, and for more Jews to do the same. To truly fellowship together. I don't pretend to be his successor, but our work building bridges is important. Whether this is your calling as it is mine and it was his, or not, please join me. 
Jonathan Feldstein was born and educated in the U.S. and immigrated to Israel in 2004. He is married and the father of six. He is president of RunforZion.com. Throughout his life and career, he has been blessed by the calling to fellowship with Christian supporters of Israel and shares experiences of living as an Orthodox Jew in Israel. He writes a regular column for Standing With Israel at charismanews.com and other prominent web sites. He can be reached at firstpersonisrael@gmail.com.
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Great Resources to help you excel in 2019! #1 John Eckhardt's "Prayers That..." 6-Book Bundle. Prayer helps you overcome anything life throws at you. Get a FREE Bonus with this bundle. #2 Learn to walk in the fullness of your purpose and destiny by living each day with Holy Spirit. Buy a set of Life in the Spirit, get a second set FREE.

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Why Neil Armstrong Was More Excited to Visit Israel Than to Visit the Moon - JONATHAN FELDSTEIN CHARISMA NEWS

(Photo by Ganapathy Kumar on Unsplash)
This week in 1969, American astronaut Neil Armstrong made history by becoming the first person to set foot on the moon. His timeless and famous remark at the time, "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind," will go down as one of the most iconic phrases of all time.

Yet, when Armstrong visited Israel in 1994 he was brought to a place in the Old City of Jerusalem and asked Meir Ben Dov, his host and noted archeologist, if Jesus himself actually would have walked there.
"I told him, 'Look, Jesus was a Jew,'" recalled Ben-Dov. These are the steps that lead to the temple, so he must have walked here many times."
Armstrong asked if these were the original steps, and Ben-Dov said that they were.
"So Jesus stepped right here?" asked Armstrong.
"That's right," answered Ben-Dov.
"I have to tell you," Armstrong said to the Israeli archaeologist, "I am more excited stepping on these stones than I was stepping on the moon."
Indeed we know that for a Christian visiting Israel is a life-changing and faith building experience. This is played out in numerous ways including visits to the Old City and specifically the Temple Mount where Jesus preached and worshipped, to the sites where He was crucified and buried, to the Jordan River where he was baptized, and of course to the Galilee and Nazareth, his hometown.

There are countless affirmations of Christians visiting Israel and having divine experiences, and Neil Armstrong's comments and frame of reference, considering that he was the first man to step on the moon, affirm this reality. But, ask any Christian who has been to Israel and at least 9 out of 10 times, you'll hear a similar affirmation and the desire to visit Israel again. And again.
Run for Zion Was conceived in order to provide such an opportunity for Christians to have this same experience, albeit in a unique and boutique way. 

More than simply a tour of the Land, Run for Zion provides a series of meaningful and hands-on experiences, one might even say a "feet-on" experience. At its core, Run for Zion has the special privilege of promoting unique opportunities for Christians to run in Jerusalem, anywhere from a full to a half-marathon or 10K. For non-runners wishing the same experience, there's also the opportunity to walk through Jerusalem's historic streets and experience the same things, albeit more slowly.
Although it's common for runners to listen to music to pass the time and motivate them along, in Jerusalem, runners often run with no music, in order to avoid distractions from the views and experiences. Running through the Old City itself is powerful, but one gets to run around the Old City and appreciate its view from the south and from the east, which is the view Jesus would have seen in approaching the holy city from the Mount of Olives.

Affirming that Jesus was a Jew in the land and was very clear to reiterate God's promise of Genesis 12:3, obligating his disciples to bless Israel, Run for Zion also provides meaningful and tangible opportunities for all participants to bless Israel and its people. Participants will have the opportunity to have friends and family sponsor their participation, the proceeds of which will go to a wide range of services that help millions of Israelis of all different backgrounds.

And because God's promise of Genesis 12:3 is a reciprocal formula, Run for Zion will also play an important role, not just by being the beneficiary of the financial blessing, but in blessing those who bless Israel by providing significant subsidies to participants. This will reduce financial barriers that might prevent somebody from being able to travel to Israel and increase the total number of people who are able to share this experience.

Running through Jerusalem's ancient streets will certainly be the anchor and main draw, whether it be for athletes who run regularly, or for students to middle-aged people who may run or walk briskly a few times a week for exercise. Maybe even some mall walkers will take the leap of faith and come to Jerusalem. However, more than the run itself, there will also be meaningful and interactive tourist experiences along with unique programs, worship, speakers and an opportunity to interact directly with the people and programs that are the recipients of the financial blessing.
If you're a runner, walker or aspire to be one, and you're a Christian who wants to visit and experience Israel, Run for Zion may be for you and provides an easy way to participate. If your church, college or other group wants to bring a team to participate together, Run for Zion offers that seamlessly.
If you're neither but want to bless Israel and stand alongside Run for Zion in its ability to maximize the blessings for Israel and all participants, there is a special need. There are Christians living in Muslim countries for whom life is not easy, and many of the countries in which they live do not recognize Israel and its right to exist, much less that Jerusalem is its capital. For most of these, visiting Israel is only a fantasy. Run for Zion has been approached to help Christians in these countries participate and has taken on the responsibility to offer additional subsidies to such people as well as to help secure visas. On their own, these tasks would not only be impossible but dangerous.
Please visit RunforZion.com to find out details, inquire about participating or make a donation so others can.
And like Neil Armstrong, more than "one small step for man," let this be your one big leap for faith. 
Jonathan Feldsteinwas born and educated in the U.S. and immigrated to Israel in 2004. He is married and the father of six. He is president of RunforZion.com. Throughout his life and career, he has been blessed by the calling to fellowship with Christian supporters of Israel and shares experiences of living as an Orthodox Jew in Israel. He writes a regular column for Standing With Israel at charismanews.com and other prominent web sites. He can be reached at firstpersonisrael@gmail.com.

Friday, May 18, 2018

Why We Really Need to Keep Our Eyes on Iran Right Now - JONATHAN FELDSTEIN CHARISMA NEWS

(YouTube/Al Jazeera English)
It's an irony that as Russia celebrated Victory Day, 73 years since the Allied victory of the tyranny of the Nazis, President Putin hosted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as an honored guest. The timing and symbolism were meaningful. At the same time, Israel was preparing to launch a bold military strike against the modern regime that's the Nazi's successor: Iran.
According to reports, Netanyahu informed Putin of impending strikes on Iranian military targets in Syria and at least passively received Putin's blessing.
Despite the success of Operation House of Cards, we are not out of the woods. Further conflict and even an all-out war might occur. Israelis are preparing. Bomb shelters in the Golan have been ordered opened and readied, and year-end school trips to northern Israel are being postponed and canceled.
One friend's four year old came home from school where the threat was clearly discussed and asked calmly when the rockets are going to start.
Unlike other recent incidents involving attacks on Iranian and Syrian military installations with Israel not taking credit or even making any official comments, following the recent strike, the biggest military operation by Israel in Syria since 1974, Israel not only took credit but threatened more. In one instance, a cabinet minister said that if Syrian President Assad were to allow Iranian aggression against Israel from Syria, Israel could even take out Assad. For a man whose own power has been teetering for most of the last decade, and who only recently has started to see gains against ISIS and other insurgent groups, this threat is not one to take lightly.
Yet it's unlikely Assad can control Iran, much less do anything than be its puppet.
Iran's response to the recent attacks on its military installations, leaving dozens of mostly Iranians dead, has been interesting. Previously, whether Israel has been responsible for specific attacks, not taking credit has given the Iranians and Syrians the ability to deny anything happened and not feel compelled to respond. Nevertheless, it's a reflexive action when military operations take place that Iranians (and Syrians and others) use the opportunity to blame Israel.
In this case, where Israel made it clear that it did carry out this attack on dozens of Iranian locations in Syria, Iran's response was not to blame Israel, but to deny it had any military presence in Syria at all. If it weren't so ridiculous it would actually be funny. A consequence of Iran saying that Israel's claims are fake news is that it can't threaten to retaliate against Israel publically for something they deny happened altogether.
Now, Iran is batting with two strikes. It's not the ninth inning, but added to the military strike this week for which Israel took credit, and the recent revelation of Israeli intelligence penetrating deep into Tehran to walk off with literally tons of documents and electronic files affirming their lies about plans to build nuclear weapons, their back is up against a wall.
Why would Iran not respond now, or why would they do so specifically now? It seems intuitive that if Israel can act as it has against Iran in Syria, they should be concerned about Israel striking deep into Iran with even greater force. Iran has, and could launch, accurate long-range missiles at Israeli cities, but doing so would beg an Israeli retaliation that would be potentially disastrous for their military as well as the survival of the regime. Iranian action that would draw a punishing Israeli response now, before they have nuclear weapons, would probably not be in their interest.
However, the Iranians are not far from being able to produce a nuclear weapon, or at least a long-range dirty bomb, and borrowing another sports metaphor, if their back is sufficiently up against a wall, they might just go for the Hail Mary.
One thing is abundantly clear: Israel will not tolerate Iranian threats beyond a certain point and made that unambiguous this week. And while Israel might not seek to instigate a major operation, Israel might welcome the opportunity if it presents itself, to strike Iran hard. Israel knows that Iran is certainly much less of a threat now, before it has nuclear weapons, and could well evaluate that even an all-out war would be better now than later when Iran could do more damage.
Many other regional and global factors are at play including Palestinian Arabs in Gaza building up their weekly and ongoing violent protests against Israel leading up to May 15 anniversary of what they call the "Nakba," or catastrophe of Israel's birth 70 years ago. The opening of the US embassy in Jerusalem will also likely see a wider backlash. Hezbollah winning an election in Lebanon making it, along with more than 100,000 rockets it has pointed at Israel, even more powerful. And the pending meeting between President Trump and N. Korean leader Kim Jung Un could send a clear signal to rogue terror states like Iran that the game is over in terms of threatening the world with nuclear weapons.
Don't be surprised to see increased violent protests from Gaza where Hamas may feel marginalized and want to flex its muscles while giving Israel a black eye publically as much of the world is supporting Israel's right to use force to defend itself. In the scheme of things, that's a sideshow. The one thing to be sure of is to keep your eyes on Iran. On Syria. And on Iran in Syria.
The game is far from over and will likely go into extra innings or overtime, depending on the metaphor you prefer.
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