Friday, February 21, 2014

Purim in March - Antioch International Church (03.18.11)

Purim, one of the annual feasts celebrated each year in March, remembers the biblical true story of Esther (Hadassah), Mordecai and Haman in Perisa. The Lord saved the Jews from the slaughter of the Persians.

As we appreciate and enjoy our Jewish roots as bleivers in Yeshua (Jesus), we also celebrate these every year in the USA! These photos are from the Antioch International Church cvelebration on March 18, 2011 in Fort, Mill, SC.

Steve Martin
Love For His People

Steve Martin, Little Big Eagle, Chuck Williams

Chuck and Gloria Williams


Steve Martin & Chuck Williams
Two kings in His service

Laurie and Steve Martin, Chuck Williams

Little Big Eagle




 Peter Wyns & Steve Martin


Senior Pastor Peter Wyns

Lydia Holly and Chuck Phelps

Geoff Graham and Laurie Martin

Colleen Baker








Ed Brigham and Richard Tompkins




Geoff Graham









Peter Wyns reading Esther from the Old Testament 


Shabbat candles on Purim

Photos by Steve Martin, 
except for the ones that I am in.


Bob Jones Tribute Song at Memorial Service - Lyn Kost, with Don Potter, Leonard Jones



Lyn Kost, son-in-law of Bob Jones (Bonnie Jones), sings a tribute song at Bob's Celebration Service.
Don Potter (guitar) and Leonard Jones (violin)

MorningStar Ministreis Feb. 21, 2014

Bob Jones passed onto heaven on Valentines Day, Feb. 14, 2014.

Video by Steve Martin, Love For His People, Inc.


Bobby Connor shares Bob Jones stories at Memorial Service at MorningStar Ministries 02.21.14



Bobby Connor shares stories of his memories of Bob Jones, who passed on Feb. 14, 2014 (Valentines Day).

MorningStar Ministries Feb. 21, 2014

Bob Jones 1930-2014
84 years

Video by Steve Martin, Love For His People

Bob Jones Passing Celebration - Show Me Your Face Lord - Don Potter



Don Potter sings at Bob Jones Celebration, Feb. 21, 2014 in honor of his passing 
on Valentine's Day, Feb. 14, 2014, at age 84.

More videos on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/loveforhispeopleinc

Video by Steve Martin, Love For His People



Bob & Bonnie Jones 2013

John Kerry - Newfound Jewish roots

Newfound Jewish roots 

gave Kerry a ‘deep’ bond 

with Israel



Secretary of State, who only learned his grandparents were Jews in 2004, says he understands Israelis’ reluctance to sign a deal

 February 20, 2014
US Secretary of State John Kerry speaks to an Israeli reporter in an interview aired Thursday, February 20, 2014 (screen capture: Channel 2)
US Secretary of State John Kerry speaks to an Israeli reporter in an 
interview aired Thursday, February 20, 2014 (screen capture: Channel 2)


WRITERS

Raphael Ahren Raphael Ahren is the diplomatic correspondent at The Times of Israel.

US Secretary of State John Kerry says his feelings toward Israel changed 10 years ago, after he found out that that he had Jewish grandparents.

“It’s a connection that’s deep. I lost a great-uncle in the Holocaust and a great-aunt. I never knew that until then. To learn that, after years of being passionate about ‘never again,’ with respect to the Holocaust, and then to understand that you are biologically and personally connected to that, is very moving,” he said in an interview aired on Thursday by Israel’s Channel 2.

“Israel itself has a special connection to me, not just because of that personal, now-known connection, but more importantly because of the amazing journey of the Jewish people,” he said in the interview, which was conducted last Tuesday at the State Department. “And now I’ve learned that, I have got a better sense of that.”

Kerry first found out about his Jewish ancestry in 2004, when he was running for president against George W. Bush. Both his father’s parents were born Jews and converted to Christianity because of anti-Semitism, and they changed their name from Cohen to Kerry when they immigrated to the United States.

Asked by the interviewer, Ilana Dayan, whether he felt that Israelis were still defined by their tragedies to the extent that those events made them hesitant to take the “leap of faith” necessary to withdraw from the West Bank and agree to the establishment of a Palestinian state, Kerry answered in the affirmative.

“But,” he added, “here is what I want to emphasize: I think my job is to try to help create a situation where the realities of the agreement are such that it’s not such a leap of faith. I don’t want this to be a leap of faith. I want this to be a leap of reason. A leap of rationality and of choice, based on a very understandable and tangible set of guaranties about security and other things.”

If that could be achieved, Kerry continued, “then we take some of the emotion away… even though it will be for some always a huge emotion, because some people have very different views about greater Judea and Samaria — I know all of that. But I also know that over 70 percent of the people of Israel believe in a two-state solution.”

The secretary of state said that he sometimes spends hours on the phone with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and understands him. But he was hesitant to say whether he believes Netanyahu would agree to the kind of concessions a peace agreement would require. “If we’ve answered all of the challenges of security for Israel, if he has secured the nation state of Israel as the home of the Jewish people, if he has secured recognition and secured the refugee issue — properly dissolved — I hope he will,” Kerry said.

Netanyahu’s primary concern is the security of Israeli civilians, Kerry stressed. “I have said this to [Palestinian Authority] President [Mahmoud] Abbas: The primary issue for any Israeli is to know that if they make an agreement, they are safer and stronger because of the agreement than they were before they made it. And that goes contrary to past experience in pulling out of Lebanon and pulling out of Gaza.”

Kerry hinted that settlers might not have to relocate under the terms of a peace deal. Asked about the personal price that a settler might have to pay when required to leave his home as a result of an accord, Kerry replied that he was not sure this would be necessary.

“I have no argument with anyone in Israel who says that no deal is better than a bad deal. I say that myself,” he said. “I’m not in the business of trying to put together a bad deal.”

Kerry dismissed criticism of him from right-wing Israeli politicians, particularly Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, who said the top US diplomat was “messianic and obsessive.”

“You know, those are judgments that other people may or may not have fun making in this process. I’m doing my job,” he said. Kerry claimed he was not insulted by Ya’alon’s remarks. “I think I am committed, and I’m determined.”

The secretary of state declined to comment on his gut reaction in January to Yedioth Ahronoth’s publication of Ya’alon’s scathing criticism, which targeted the US mediation of the peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

“That’s not the way I operate. I’m an optimist and I am a believer in possibilities,” he said. “People who know me know that when I sink my teeth into something, if I get the bit between my teeth, I try to get it done.”


Read more: Newfound Jewish roots gave Kerry a 'deep' bond with Israel | The Times of Israel http://www.timesofisrael.com/newfound-jewish-roots-gave-kerry-a-deep-bond-with-israel/#ixzz2tyiTbbC5
Follow us: @timesofisrael on Twitter | timesofisrael on Facebook


Shabbat Shalom - Rest in Him, the Lion of Judah - all ye nations of the world

 
The Lion of Judah


Find your peace 
in the Lord God of Israel. 
Yeshua HaMashiach
Jesus Christ


Let the love shine...



The map of Israel...and it will grow.


Steve & Laurie Martin
Love For His People


Rocking the Noah boat - movie report by Chris Stone Founder Faith Driven Consumer



Last week we wrote to you about the flood of controversy
surrounding Paramount Pictures’ $125 million film Noah
to be released on March 28th.

We asked you to weigh in, and tell us what you think.

Talk about rocking the boat! In the few days since we shared your
concerns about Noah, national and international press attention has
tried to pit Faith Driven Consumer in a battle against Paramount –
a la David and Goliath.

To recap: We shared Hollywood-based press stories with which
questioned the degree to which Noah will appeal to faith-based
audiences – given reports that the biblical story has been changed
significantly. And we asked you to weigh in and tell us whether
you as a Faith Driven Consumer would be satisfied with a
biblically themed movie – designed to appeal to you – which
replaces the Bible’s core message with one created by Hollywood.

When the results were tallied, an overwhelming 98% of Faith Driven
Consumers told us that they would not be satisfied with a biblically
themed movie that changes the biblical message. Then we shared
the results of this consumer survey in an effort to engage with
Hollywood on the entertainment needs, wants and desires of the
46 million Faith Driven Consumers like you and me who spend
$1.75 trillion annually.

Creating a storm of controversy was never our intent. Instead,
 we simply advocated on behalf of Faith Driven Consumers in
the marketplace of goods, services and ideas – and created
a point of dialogue where our community’s interests are expressed.

Take a moment now to read this open letter we wrote to
Hollywood about the Noah movie controversy. And be sure
to share it with your family and friends.

Thanks for joining the Faith Driven Consumer community.
Together, we are engaging corporate America and creating
a welcoming place in the market for faith-based interests
and values.


Sincerely,
Chris Stone
Founder
Faith Driven Consumer

Almond tree blossoms in Israel

Almond tree budding in Israel

Almonds on the tree

Almond in the shell


The almond is a deciduous tree, growing 4–10 m (13–33 ft) in height, with a trunk of up to 30 cm (12 in) in diameter. The young twigs are green at first, becoming purplish where exposed to sunlight, then grey in their second year. The leaves are 3–5 inches long, with a serrated margin and a 2.5 cm (1 in) petiole. The flowers are white to pale pink, 3–5 cm (1–2 in) diameter with five petals, produced singly or in pairs and appearing before the leaves in early spring.
Almonds begin bearing an economic crop in the third year after planting. Trees reach full bearing five to six years after planting. The fruit matures in the autumn, 7–8 months after flowering. (Wikepedia)



Dictionaries - Easton's Bible Dictionary - Almond
Almond - a native of Syria and Israel. In form, blossoms, and fruit it resembles the peach tree. Its blossoms are of a very pale pink colour, and appear before its leaves. Its Hebrew name, shaked , signifying "wakeful, hastening," is given to it on account of its putting forth its blossoms so early, generally in February, and sometimes even in January. 
In Eccl 12:5 , it is referred to as illustrative, probably, of the haste with which old age comes. There are others, however, who still contend for the old interpretation here. "The almond tree bears its blossoms in the midst of winter, on a naked, leafless stem, and these blossoms (reddish or flesh-coloured in the beginning) seem at the time of their fall exactly like white snow-flakes. In this way the almond blossom is a very fitting symbol of old age, with its silvery hair and its wintry, dry, barren, unfruitful condition." 
In Jeremiah 1:11 "I see a rod of an almond tree [shaked]...for I will hasten [shaked] my word to perform it" the word is used as an emblem of promptitude. Jacob desired his sons ( Genesis 43:11 ) to take with them into Egypt of the best fruits of the land, almonds, etc., as a present to Joseph, probably because this tree was not a native of Egypt. Aaron's rod yielded almonds ( Numbers 17:8 ; Hebrews 9:4 ). 
Moses was directed to make certain parts of the candlestick for the ark of carved work "like unto almonds" ( Exodus 25:33 Exodus 25:34 ). The Hebrew word luz , translated "hazel" in the Authorized Version ( Genesis 30:37 ), is rendered in the Revised Version "almond." It is probable that luz denotes the wild almond, while shaked denotes the cultivated variety.
These dictionary topics are from
M.G. Easton M.A., D.D., Illustrated Bible Dictionary, Third Edition,
published by Thomas Nelson, 1897. Public Domain, copy freely.

Virtual Tour - Deep Inside the Caves of Hebron - video (Israel365)

And afterwards Abraham buried Sarah 

his wife in the cave of Machpela 

facing Mamre, which is in Hebron

in the Land of Canaan. 

GENESIS (23:19)
 

וְאַחֲרֵי כֵן קָבַר אַבְרָהָם אֶת

 שָׂרָה אִשְׁתּוֹ אֶל מְעָרַת שְׂדֵה הַמַּכְפֵּלָה

 עַל פְּנֵי מַמְרֵא הִוא חֶבְרוֹן בְּאֶרֶץ כְּנָעַן

בראשית כג:יט


ve-ah-kha-RAY khane ka-VAR av-ra-HAM
et sa-RA eesh-TOE el me-ah-RAT se-DAY
ha-makh-pay-LA al pe-NAY mam-RAY hee
khev-RONE be-eh-RETZ ke-na-AN

Shabbat Inspiration


Why was the city called Hebron, חברון? “This name,”
says the sages of Israel, “is made up of the contraction
of two Hebrew words: חבר נאה ha-VER na-EH, agreeable
friend; this designates Abraham who was the first
agreeable friend of God. God had said to Israel
(Isaiah 41:8), “The seed of Abraham, My friend.”
Walk in the footsteps of Abraham and become a friend
of the holy city of Hebron. You'll receive a Silver Medallion
and Certificate of Appreciation from the Hebron's Mayor.
 




Virtual Tour - Deep Inside the Caves of Hebron

This virtual tour of the Cave of the Patriarchs
makes you feel as if you are right here, deep
within the walls of the Cave, learning the rich
history and secrets of the sacred site.

Watch Now »




Hebron: First Wonder of the World"I’m frequently asked about
my motivation to live in Hebron. Why live here?" says David Wilder.
See the world of Hebron through the eyes of an Israeli.

Read More »


Glass Shabbat Candlesticks and Tray
This beautiful glass Shabbat candlelighting set
will bring the light of the Holy Land into your home.
A lovely centerpiece that is decorated with deep
red color and pomegranate motif, and matching
designs on the accompanying tray.

Get FREE shipping on this great deal »



Today's Israel Photo

Today's photo shows the ancient stone path leading into
Hebron. Two walls – one 4,500 years old and dated to
the era of Noah, and another wall – 3,700 years old from
the times of Abraham and Sarah, ensconce a stairwell
that is over 4,000 years old. Here one can literally walk
in the footsteps of Abraham.

View More Scenes of Israel »



Thank You
Today's Scenes and Inspiration is sponsored by
William Gottfried of Orinda, California in honor of
Toby Gottfried.

Sponsor a Day »

"Thank You So Much For Sharing Israel With Me"It’s great
to hear from so many of you - stay in touch and let us know
where in the world you are enjoying Israel365!

Stay in Touch »

Everyday when I read your mail...my heart just yearns for Israel..
Thank you so much for sharing Israel with me. It brings shalom
to my heart. Bless you. Linda Prinsloo, South Africa

Dear Rabbi, I write to thank you for including my email address
in your subscribers' mailing list since November. We appreciate
the daily transliteration, which reaches out to our friends who
missed out learning to read in Hebrew.
Isaac M., U.K


Shabbat Shalom,
Rabbi Tuly Weisz
RabbiTuly@Israel365.com



Copyright © 2014 Israel365, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you signed up for daily
Israel Scenes and Inspiration on our website,
www.israel365.com.

Our mailing address is:

Israel365
36 Ein Gedi StreetRamat Beit Shemesh 99000
Israel


Islam Unveiled - Raymond Ibrahim CBN News Contributor, Middle East and Islam Expert

Raymond Ibrahim
CBN News Contributor, Middle East and Islam Expert

<< US Chose to Stay Silent on Muslim Persecution of Christians |Blog Home


A new video of the 12 Christian nuns kidnapped in Syria recently appeared. In it, the nuns are taped sitting in a room and being questioned by an unseen man, presumably a member of the kidnappers. He asks them how they are, if they’ve been mistreated, etc.

They respond that they are being treated fine, that they very much look forward to being returned to their convent, that they heartily thank the world for its concern, and that they continually pray that God grant peace to all nations.

Their words say one thing, their expressions and demeanor another. Put differently, as female captives of Islamic jihadis, what else could they say but what they were told to say? (See, for example, how the nun in glasses had to be forced to face the camera at 1:46.) Even if one of them dared to say the “wrong thing,” it naturally would have been edited out. Who knows how many takes it took to get the video—which includes a bizarre clip of the nuns having a snowball fight with their abductors—just right?

One thing, however, although minor, speaks volumes concerning the nature of their captivity. Although these same nuns, in pictures before they were kidnapped, often appear wearing the large pectoral crosses that nuns often wear, these are all gone in the recent video.

This is to be expected, considering the “pious” nature of their captors. According to strict Islamic teaching, Christians and other non-Muslims are forbidden to show any signs or expressions of their “polytheism” (shirk in Arabic). Indeed, this is spelled out clearly in the Conditions of Omar, which mainstream Muslim teaching attributes to the second caliph of the same name.

After the seventh century armies of Islam conquered a particular Christian region—possibly and ironically in Syria—Omar stipulated several conditions for Christians to accept, including “Not to display a cross on them [churches], nor raise our voices during prayer or readings in our churches anywhere near Muslims; Not to produce a cross or [Christian] book in the markets of the Muslims” (see Crucified Again, pgs. 24-27 for my new translation of the entire text of theConditions of Omar).

From here we understand the true plight of the captive nuns: to their captors, not only are the Christian women hostages to be used for leverage, but ideologically speaking, they are “infidel” inferiors—near sub-humans who are more akin to animals. Indeed, the same Caliph Omar whom Syria’s jihadis are hearkening to regarding the ban on Christian crosses is also on record saying that the life of a non-Muslim is equal to the life of a dog (Western readers should bear in mind that in Arab/Muslim culture, dogs are among the lowest life forms.)

As such, the plight of the kidnapped nuns remains precarious—all their scripted words aside. (See here for more on the history of Islamic jihad on Christian nuns.)

As for the effects of removing the nuns’ crosses, an Arabic column by one Father George makes an interesting point highlighting the difference between outwardly observant “Salafi” Muslims, presumably like the kidnappers—with their beards and prayer callouses on their foreheads—and inwardly observant Christians like these nuns:


St Paul says “But God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world” (Galatians 6:14). You removed the cross from the nuns’ breasts. Remove it! We do not rely on the visible. But know that the cross is firmly planted in the hearts of each and every one of those nuns.