Showing posts with label worldwide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label worldwide. Show all posts

Friday, August 18, 2017

Shabbat Shalom to all our Jewish friends and believers worldwide! - LOVE FOR HIS PEOPLE


Shabbat Shalom 
to all our Jewish friends 
and believers worldwide!

LOVE FOR HIS PEOPLE


We send greetings of ahava (love) and shalom (peace) to all our Jewish friends and believers worldwide. May the love of the Living God of Israel, Yeshua HaMashiach, Jesus Christ, be known in your hearts today.

Be blessed!

Steve and Laurie Martin

Love For His People, Inc.
Charlotte, North Carolina
USA




Love For His People Editor: We'd love to keep in touch with you. 



Wednesday, September 14, 2016

How Christians Can Stand in Unity With Jewish Brothers and Sisters Worldwide - AARON EBY CHARISMA NEWS


Tower of David in Jerusalem
Tower of David in Jerusalem (Wikimedia Commons )

How Christians Can Stand in Unity With Jewish Brothers and Sisters Worldwide

AARON EBY  CHARISMA NEWS
Standing With Israel
About 120 Jewish men and women, followers of Jesus of Nazareth, gathered together in Solomon's Colonnade, under the shade of its cedar beams. They assembled for prayer in the Temple Courts alongside Jews from all over the world in honor of the biblical festival called Shavuot or Pentecost.
Following Jesus' command, these disciples had remained in Jerusalem after His ascension. It was there that they received the gift of the Holy Spirit. In Jerusalem, they were transformed from a small band of disciples into a true ekklesia (assembly).
Just before His ascension, Jesus told His followers that they would be his witnesses in Jerusalem, in all of Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the Earth (Acts 1:8). Notice how Jesus Himself envisions the world with Jerusalem at its center.
Jerusalem is mentioned no less than 58 times in the book of Acts alone. The followers of Jesus met regularly in Solomon's Portico, an area within the Temple courts. And even as the message spread across the region, Jerusalem remained the home base of the apostles. Paul would collect donations from other communities of believers and bring them to the apostolic community in the holy city.
Like other Jews, first-century followers of Messiah faced Jerusalem when they prayed. It represented for them the hope of redemption and the Second Coming of Jesus.
As the church began to distance herself from her Jewish roots, reverence for Jerusalem was lost. Instead of facing Jerusalem in prayer, Christians began to adopt the more universal custom of simply facing east regardless of location. This is the custom among Orthodox Christians to this day.
But today, more and more Christians are recognizing Jerusalem as the "apple of God's eye," knowing that this is the place of Messiah's glorious return. It makes sense to stand in solidarity with the Jewish people today and return to the ancient practice.
Spiritual Jerusalem
Why turn to face a physical place? Didn't Jesus say to the Samaritan woman that true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and in truth (John 4:23)? Isn't the present Jerusalem "in slavery," while the Jerusalem above is "our mother" (Gal. 4:25-26)? Doesn't the body of Messiah now constitute the Temple and dwelling place for God by the Spirit (Eph. 4:22)?
In speaking to the Samaritan woman, Jesus confirmed that the Jewish people possess the true revelation of God. He told her, "You worship what you do not know; we know what we worship, for salvation is of the Jews" (John 4:22). But Jesus was aware that only one generation later, the Romans would ransack the Temple and tear it down to its foundation. Despite its holy, chosen status and glorious future, it would not always be physically possible to pray there. And yet, we worship in spirit, turning our hearts toward Jerusalem and anticipating God's future plans. (Thank God, in our time Jerusalem is inhabited by Jews once more, and people once again worship there every day!)
In Galatians, Paul contrasts the "present Jerusalem" with the "Jerusalem above." But this is not a new idea that originated with Paul. The ancient rabbis also knew and talked about the "Jerusalem above." This in no way minimizes the importance of Jerusalem—actually, it emphasizes it.
After all, how many cities are there that have a heavenly version? This just shows that our Jerusalem on Earth is a physical representative of a tremendous spiritual reality.
Similarly, the concept of a spiritual Temple did not originate with Christianity. For example, the ancient rabbis looked closely at the verse, "And let them make Me a sanctuary, that I may dwell in their midst" (Ex. 25:8). In Hebrew, this verse can also be understood as "They will make Me a sanctuary, but I will dwell within them." In other words, God's faithful people have always constituted a dwelling place for His Spirit.
This illustrates an important concept in a Jewish frame of mind: physical and spiritual realities can exist simultaneously. The heavenly tabernacle already existed before God commanded Moses to build one on Earth; the heavenly tabernacle was the "pattern" that God showed him on the mountain (Ex. 25:9). One does not negate or obviate the other.
Turning the Heart
If you don't know which way is Jerusalem, or if it is just not practical for in your time and place, then don't worry.  We are not praying to Jerusalem; we are praying to our Father in heaven. Direct your heart toward Him.
There is nothing magical about facing a certain direction in prayer. God could hear our prayers even if we were speaking into a hole in the ground! And it certainly has no bearing on our salvation.
And yet, prayer is communication. Communication not only exists in the word we speak, but also in body language. Think of what it conveys when a person faces away from you while speaking, or when someone's eyes are darting elsewhere. What would that kind of distraction look like in prayer?
The author of Hebrews invokes Zion and Jerusalem as symbolic of the new covenant enacted through our Messiah:
"But you have come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to innumerable angels in festal gathering, and to the assembly of the firstborn who are enrolled in heaven, and to God, the judge of all, and to the spirits of the righteous made perfect, and to Jesus, the mediator of a new covenant, and to the sprinkled blood that speaks a better word than the blood of Abel" (Heb. 12:22-24)
By turning to face Jerusalem, we express to God our desire to step into line with His plans and purposes in this world. We show that He has our full attention. We communicate that we are eager to see Messiah return.
When Christians turn their hearts and faces toward the holy city, anticipating its redemption and transformation through Messiah, they stand in unity with our Jewish brothers and sisters all across the world. They unite with countless generations of Jewish people going back to the earliest followers of Jesus. 
Aaron Eby is a writer, teacher, and translator for the messianic ministry of First Fruits of Zion (ffoz.org), an international organization with offices in Israel, Canada and USA, bringing Messianic Jewish teaching to Christians and Jews. Aaron is also on the board of directors for The Bram Center for Messianic Jewish Learning in Jerusalem (thebramcenter.org).
3 Reasons Why you should read Life in the Spirit. 1) Get to know the Holy Spirit. 2) Learn to enter God's presence 3) Hear God's voice clearly! Go deeper!
Has God called you to be a leader? Ministry Today magazine is the source that Christian leaders who want to serve with passion and purpose turn to. Subscribe now and receive a free leadership book.
Did you enjoy this blog? Click here to receive it by email.

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Israel can’t rely on ‘weak’ US to deal with Iran - THE TIMES OF ISRAEL

Israel can’t rely on ‘weak’ US to deal with Iran, Ya’alon warns
Tehran has outwitted West ‘in Persian bazaar,’ defense minister says, slamming Obama for radiating weakness worldwide, risking more terror at home

BY TIMES OF ISRAEL STAFF March 18, 2014


Moshe Ya'alon in Knesset on March 11, 2014. 
(photo credit: Miriam Alster/Flash90)

Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon on Monday issued a scathing critique of the Obama administration, declaring that Israel cannot rely on the US to thwart Iran’s nuclear program, accusing the administration of broadcasting weakness throughout the world, and warning that its perceived weakness was inviting further terrorism against US targets.

Get The Times of Israel's Daily Edition by email
and never miss our top stories
FREE SIGN UP!

Speaking at a Tel Aviv University event reported by the Haaretz daily, Ya’alon said Israel could not afford to rely on the Obama administration to lead an action against Iran’s nuclear program, and that Israel could only rely on itself. 

Israel had believed that “the one who should lead the campaign against Iran is the US,” but instead, “the US at a certain stage began negotiating with them, and unfortunately in the Persian bazaar the Iranians were better,” he said. Therefore, “we (Israelis) have to look out for ourselves.”

Ya’alon’s office confirmed his remarks about Iran, but refused to comment as to whether the defense minister was advocating an Israeli strike on Iran. Ya’alon was widely reported to have opposed an Israeli resort to force against Iran in the past, but the Haaretz report said his comments Sunday indicated that he had changed his stance, and was now inclined to support Israeli military intervention in Iran.


In this Jan. 15, 2011 file photo, Iran’s heavy water nuclear facility is back-dropped by mountains near the central city of Arak, Iran. 
(AP Photo/ISNA, Hamid Foroutan)

In his reported remarks Sunday, Ya’alon was adamant that “Iran is fooling the world” about its nuclear program,” but said the West preferred to put off any confrontation — “to next year, or the next term; but it will blow up in the end.” The Iranians had been “on all fours” because of sanctions and diplomatic isolation, but had been allowed to recover, he charged. 

The interim deal signed in Geneva in November “is very comfortable for the Iranians,” he said, enabling them to establish themselves as a threshold state “and break out to the bomb when they choose to do so.”

Ya’alon spoke as world powers and Iran are set to start a new round of talks over Iran’s contested nuclear program in Vienna. Iran denies it seeks nuclear weapons. On Sunday Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif predicted that the talks, scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday, would not produce a final deal. Iran capped uranium enrichment after the six-month interim deal was struck in November, in return for easing non-core sanctions by the West.

Moving to a wider critique of the Obama administration, Ya’alon reportedly stressed several times that the US was radiating weakness in every region worldwide. “The Sunni camp [in the Middle East] expected that the US would support it, and would be as determined as Russia is in its support of the Shiite axis,” he was quoted as saying. “I hear voices of disappointment in the region. I was in Singapore, and I heard disappointment at the strengthening of China and the weakening of the United States. Look what’s happening in the Ukraine; there, to my sorrow, the US is broadcasting weakness.”

Ya’alon, a former IDF chief of General Staff, warned that if the US continued to show weakness internationally, its own national security would be severely damaged. “If you wait at home, terror will come calling again,” he said. “This is a war of civilizations. If you are perceived to be weak, that certainly does not pay in the world. I hope the US will reassert itself.”

AP contributed to this report.

Read more: Israel can't rely on 'weak' US to deal with Iran, Ya'alon warns | The Times of Israel http://www.timesofisrael.com/defense-minister-we-cant-rely-on-us-to-deal-with-iran/#ixzz2wLTHrYt8
Follow us: @timesofisrael on Twitter | timesofisrael on Facebook