Wednesday, November 27, 2013

CharismaNews - Steve Strang "Why Christians Must Pray for and Support Israel"

Why Christians Must Pray for and Support Israel





Steve in Israel
Steve Strang (center) poses for a photo in Efrat, Israel, with (left to right) rabbi David Nekrutman, Anne Ayalon, Sherry Khoury and her husband, pastor Steven Khoury, at the Center for Jewish-Christian Understanding and Cooperation.
JERUSALEM, Israel—My sixth trip to Israel makes me realize more than ever the importance of Bible-believing Christians standing with Israel.

Nearly all my adult life, I’ve supported Israel by raising money to help the Jewish people, sponsoring events that foster support for Israel with other leaders such as John Hagee or encouraging people to travel to Israel, as my wife and I are doing this week with our friend and author Perry Stone.

I flew to Israel early, before the tour, to network with key leaders in a whirlwind couple of days of nonstop meetings that will provide story ideas for our print magazines or online. As soon as I have time to digest all I saw and learned, I will write articles about the interesting people I met.

But now I want to give an overview of who I met and what I learned, much of which is important not only for me but for each of us.
1. We must stand with other Christian believers in the land.
I met with Dan Juster, one of the apostolic leaders that is also one of the deepest thinkers in the modern Messianic movement. He helped me understand spiritually what’s going on in the land and how believers need prayer and support.
I then attended the exciting King of Kings congregation in downtown Jerusalem, pastored by my friend Wayne Hilsden. I had time to only attend one service while in Israel. While I would have enjoyed being at a service in Hebrew, I was more comfortable in Wayne’s English service that had the same spirit and style I’m used to in my own church. You can see their worship here.

I also learned firsthand of the opposition and persecution some believers face in Israel. Wayne pointed out an “anti-missionary” standing outside the service to urge young Jewish believers in Yeshua to turn away.
2. We must pray for the peace of Jerusalem and for a spiritual awakening in the land.
King of Kings has prayer 16 hours a day atop a 17-story building. The view over the city was magnificent. What a strategic location! The next day, I visited another 24/7 prayer ministry in a mixed Jewish and Arab area south of the Old City. To avoid attention, this group posts only small signs that say “24/7,” which the initiated know means intercessory prayer is offered there around the clock.
The prayer room is located in the TBN building and has a view of the Dome of the Rock. I didn’t interview anyone there. Instead, I joined the prayers for the peace of Jerusalem for strengthening believers, for nations standing with Israel and for ways to reach the Arab community with the gospel.
3. The Arab Christian community needs our support.
It is well known that at one time, the majority of the population in Bethlehem was Christian. According to a 2012 article in Israel Hayom, the municipality says that 40 percent of the 32,000 residents of Bethlehem are Christian. But, unofficial data suggests the percentage is actually lower. While many Arab Christians are nominal Christians whose families have been Christians for generations, there is a small and struggling evangelical Christian Arab community there.
One of the most impressive meetings I had was with a young Arab pastor named Steven Khoury, whose Calvary Church reaches about 400 people a week in the part of Jerusalem around the Mount of Olives. It is the only evangelical church in that area. They have a hard time even finding a place to meet. Members of his church have been killed by radicals, and he has had trouble raising the funds he needs to operate and buy property. I was impressed by this passionate young man, and I plan to write more about his church later.
4. There is a new era of understanding between evangelicals and some Orthodox Jews.
Steven Khoury is a good friend to a young Orthodox rabbi named David Nekrutman, the executive director of the Center for Jewish-Christian Understanding and Cooperation. In the biblical town of Efrat, it is the first example I’ve seen of the Orthodox community reaching out to evangelicals. That impressed me as well, and I will also write about it later.
My personal experience with the Orthodox has been no cooperation and often hostility. So I’m encouraged to hear about the breakthroughs between the two groups and to hear that at least at this center, the Orthodox seem to value the support that Christian Zionists give Israel.
5. It’s good to know a networker in a foreign land.
The friend who set up most of my appointments is Anne Ayalon, the wife of Danny Ayalon, who has served as an Israeli ambassador to the United States, in the Knesset and in many other important posts. Anne is a humble woman who has done as much as anyone I know to bridge the evangelical Christian and Jewish communities. Born an American, she converted to Judaism when she got married but describes herself only as a “woman of faith.” She declined to be interviewed because she prefers to be behind the scenes, where she is a connector and influencer.

I had many other wonderful meetings, including one with Chris Mitchell, bureau chief of the CBN Jerusalem bureau, who recently wrote an important new book called Dateline Jerusalem, which he calls an “eyewitness account of prophecies unfolding in the Middle East.” I also met some Israeli intellectuals who teach leadership principles from Bible characters to officers in the Israeli Defense Forces. And I got a very quick tour of the Bible Lands Museum by its director and saw the "Book of Books" display. I plan to go back to spend hours learning more about this wonderful land that gave us the Bible, which is God’s revelation to man.
My meetings have not ended. Later, I’m meeting with leaders of Magen David Adom—the Israeli equivalent of the Red Cross which is the first responder in disasters—and with leaders of Operation Lifeshield. Both are charities for which we’ve raised money in the past. I also am meeting the head of the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem and a local publisher.

As I process what I’ve learned and do more research, I’ll write more. And I’ll tell you about this amazing tour with Perry Stone. My head is spinning after the first day of visiting the Mount of Olives, the Garden of Gethsemane, the Church of the Ascension, the Hill of Ill Counsel, the recently discovered Pool of Siloam, a kibbutz where a pivotal battle was won in the war of 1948, and some archeological digs south of the Temple Mount with actual pavement where Jesus would have walked. I can’t wait until tomorrow. I have six more days before the trip ends!

If you stand with Israel, if you’ve had a life-changing trip to Israel or if you learned anything from this column, leave your comments below.
Steve Strang is the founder and publisher of Charisma. Follow him on Twitter at @sstrang or Facebook (stephenestrang).
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Bill Yount - "If I Had A Hammer"


Bill Yount
Posted: 26 Nov 2013













Your prayers work wonders for us. Right before our New Jersey ministry trip our car wouldn’t start. Triple A road service hit the starter with a hammer and it started right up. Being too late for a mechanic to put a new starter on our car, I asked a seasoned mechanic, “What should I do?” 

He said, “Take a hammer with you and if it doesn’t start, hit the starter with a hammer!” I said, ” Do you mean I am going to New Jersey by the way of a hammer?” The next morning we left and never had to use the hammer. The car kept starting for us. 

God spoke to me on the way. “I want to release a ‘hammer anointing’ throughout the state of New Jersey.”

I used the hammer in every meeting to hit some things that God wanted to start back up that had stopped such as ministries and to start some new things for His kingdom. His word like a hammer came down on injustice, generational curses, the political realm and so many other things. 

His hammer struck so hard that I heard the Liberty Bell ring in Philadelphia. The claw of the hammer was used to loosen things in the Spirit. God really does use the foolish things for His glory. Who knows how far God’s hammer will travel across this nation and around the world. Again your prayers did it. 

A precious brother there put a new starter on our car as a gift from the Lord before we left. Thanks for your prayers.

Blessings,

Bill Yount


www.billyount.com

Israel at Odds Over Latest EU Slap in the Face

Israel at Odds Over Latest EU Slap in the Face

Tuesday, November 26, 2013 |  Israel Today Staff  
Israeli ministers this week were hotly debating what to do about the European Union's rejection of an Israeli proposal on how the Jewish state can participate in a major upcoming research program without legitimizing the dreaded "Jewish settlements."
As part of its new anti-Jewish settlement policy guidelines set to go into effect in 2014, the EU will ban cooperation with all Israeli research institutes that have a presence in Judea and Samaria, the so-called "West Bank."
That means Israel won't be able to participate in the important upcoming Horizon 2020 program, which it has already poured hundreds of millions of euros into preparing for.
Israel tried to propose that all Horizon 2020 events in the Jewish state would take place inside the pre-1967 borders, but the EU recently rejected that offer.
Some, like Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, are of the opinion that Israel should fully shun Europe over its new wave of boycotts. Others, like Science Minister Yaakov Peri, insist Israel must do everything possible to be included.
Where ministers from both sides of the spectrum agree is that the state of relations between Israel and Europe has never been more troubling.
An urgent ministerial meeting called by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday decided that Justice Minister Tzipi Livni would continue for the time being trying to reach an understanding with the Europeans.
We would like to remind our readers of Israel Today's efforts to help lessen the impact of the European boycott on both Israelis and Palestinians. While European claims to be imposing the boycott in the service of the Palestinian cause, the reality is that many Palestinians will lose their jobs as a result.
Help us turn this boycott into a BUY-COTT! **Visit our anti-boycott page now!
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iMenurkey: Menorah + Turkey = Menurkey


Menorah + Turkey = Menurkey

Happy Thanksgivukkah :) Take part in the ancient tradition of lighting the Menorah as well as celebrating this once in a lifetime event!

Features:
Easy to use
Appropriate for all ages
Light candles with the touch of your finger
Automatically shows the right number of candles per day of Chanukah / Hanukkah
Beautiful graphics and animation
Candles melt down over 30 minutes
Fully internationalized
Supports iPhone® Retina, iPod Touch®, iPad®, iPad Mini®, iPad Mini with Retina Display®, iPad Air®
Works smoothly on both iOS6 and iOS7

The menorah that has taken the world by storm now has an app!

Commemorating the rare overlap of Thanksgiving and Hanukkah, the Menurkey was conceived and designed by 10-year-old New York resident Asher Weintraub. After an incredible Kickstarter campaign & a Wall Street Journal cover, Menurkey has teamed up with the creators of iMenorah to bring you iMenurkey. Celebrate this epic mash-up holiday in style :)


Works on iPhone® and iPod Touch®

Works on iPad® and iPad Mini®







A Jutanabet Production // Mike Jutan // Matthew Parrott
Created in collaboration with Menurkey

Google Ads off our blog.


Editor's Note: I removed all of the Google Ads from our blog. I tried controlling the ones I didn't like, wouldn't support, or didn't want to imply that I did, but was not totally successful. So I just removed them all together. The Lord will provide with other support for His work.

I will not compromise our beliefs to gain a few dollars.

Blessings on all ye heads who read our Love For His People blog!

Steve Martin
Founder/President
Love For His People


Hanukkah - Hebrew song and video



Thank You Lord! - Don Moen Praise & Worship (HD) With Song list/lyrics (+playlist)


           Thank you Lord!



Thank you Lord!




Tuesday, November 26, 2013

What is Hanukkah (Chanukah)? (Nov. 27-Dec. 5, 2013)

What is Hanukkah?
Chanukah occurs in the Hebrew calendar month of Kislev. This year, 2013 the date is November 27-December 5.




Chanukah -- the eight-day festival of light that begins on the eve of the 25th of the Jewish month of Kislev-- celebrates the triumph of lightover darkness, of purity overadulteration, of spirituality over materiality.
More than twenty-one centuries ago, the Holy Land was ruled by the Seleucids (Syrian-Greeks), who sought to forcefully Hellenize the people of Israel. Against all odds, a small band of faithful Jews defeated one of the mightiest armies on earth, drove the Greeks from the land, reclaimed the Holy Temple in Jerusalem and rededicated it to the service of G-d.
When they sought to light the Temple's menorah (the seven branched candelabrum), they found only a single cruse of olive oil that had escaped contamination by the Greeks; miraculously, the one-day supply burned for eight days, until new oil could be prepared under conditions of ritual purity.
To commemorate and publicize these miracles, the sages instituted the festival of Chanukah. At the heart of the festival is the nightly menorah (candelabrum) lighting: a single flame on the first night, two on the second evening, and so on till the eighth night of Chanukah, when all eight lights are kindled.
On Chanukah we also add the Hallel and Al HaNissim in our daily prayers to offer praise and thanksgiving to G-d for "delivering the strong into the hands of the weak, the many into the hands of the few... the wicked into the hands of therighteous."
Chanukah customs include eating foods fried in oil -- latkes (potato pancakes) and sufganiot (doughnuts); playing with the dreidel (a spinning top on which are inscribed the Hebrew letters nungimmelhei and shin, an acronym for Nes Gadol Hayah Sham, "a great miracle happened there"); and the giving ofChanukah gelt, gifts of money, to children.
Click here for the complete story of Chanukah, and here for a comprehensive "How To" guide for the observances and customs of Chanukah.


From: Chabad.org

Amazing Discovery Just Made Right Outside Jerusalem!

Breaking News - 590x148
2D9787185-22-635x357.blocks_desktop_large 2
Click here to watch: Amazing Discovery


A remarkable archaeological find in the Judean lowlands
southwest of Jerusalem includes a six-millennia-old cultic
temple and a 10,000-year-old house. The ancient sites
were located in routine archaeological digs conducted
ahead of a planned expansion of Route 38, the main
access road to Beit Shemesh. The building is the oldest
 ever found in the area, and constitutes remarkable
 “evidence of man’s transition to permanent dwellings,”
researchers said. Labeling it “a fascinating glimpse into
thousands of years of human development,” the
Israel Antiquities Authority, together with the Netivei
 Israel Company that is carrying out the highway
expansion, invited the public to visit the excavation
site in Eshtaol.


WATCH HERE
***
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Israel is in My Heart

Happy Hanukkah (Nov. 27-Dec. 5, 2013)


Blessings on ye heads!

With our love,
Steve & Laurie Martin
Love For His People

My life Amazing true love story of Derek Prince, his two wives and 12 daughters



YouTube full length video: 

Kings College in England

 
Lydia Christensen and eight orphan girls
- later Derek's wife and adopted daughters

Derek teaching the Word



Lydia Christensen Prince

Lydia Christensen Prince (1890-1975) was born in North Jutland, at the northern tip of Denmark, the youngest of four sisters in an affluent family. Her father was a successful builder who played an important role in developing their home town of Bronderslev. Lydia became a teacher in the state school system of Denmark and was a pioneer in the field of home economics.

By 1925, she had obtained a post as director of home economics in a large new school in the town of Korsor. While seeking more meaning for her life, she started reading the Bible and received a vision of Jesus Christ that led to her salvation and baptism in the Holy Spirit. After months of earnest prayer and waiting upon God, she became convinced that God was asking her to give up her position as a teacher and go to Jerusalem in the tumultuous days before Israel became a nation.

In October 1928, at the age of thirty-eight, she set out for Jerusalem with about $200 in traveler's checks, no mission or church to support her, and no idea of what she was to do when she arrived.

She soon established herself there, learned Arabic, and founded a children's home, becoming the cherished "mother" to dozens of Jewish and Arab orphans, mainly girls, eight of whom became her own children. She also began ministering the gospel to Arab women and later to the British soldiers who visited Jerusalem during their furloughs in World War II.

In the mid-1940s, she met and married Derek Prince, a philosophy and language scholar, who was serving in the British army and was stationed in Jerusalem. They ministered there together until the birth of the State of Israel in 1948 when they moved to England with their eight girls. The Princes served congregations, taught, and ministered while living in England, Africa (where they adopted their ninth daughter), Canada, and the United States.

After settling in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, they began traveling internationally as Derek preached and taught the Bible in many nations of the world. Throughout these years, Lydia took care of their family, worked tirelessly and faithfully alongside Derek in their ministry, and even returned to her home economics roots when they were in Africa, teaching home economics to the African women students.

Following a stroke and a two-year illness, Lydia Christensen Prince died in October 1975. Her passing was deeply mourned by her family and thousands of people worldwide from a wide variety of backgrounds whose lives she had touched in her nearly fifty years of enthusiastic, energetic, and compassionate ministry.

For more on Lydia, there is a movie production:


Israel's History - a Picture a Day (Beta) - Walls & Gates of Jerusalem

Israel's History - a Picture a Day (Beta)



Panorama of Jerusalem and the walls of the city. Note how few buildings were outside the walls of the Old City.  (Chatham University Archives, circa 1890) Click on pictures to enlarge


The Chatham University is not the only library to digitize their vintage pictures from Palestine.  In recent weeks we have discovered newly-scanned collections at several more libraries and even a European church.  We will present the collections in future postings.

The Chatham University Archives placed all 110 colored slides from the"Holy Land Lantern Slides"online, and in this posting we present a selection to focus on the collection's pictures of Jerusalem's walls and gates.  


Another Jerusalem Panorama taken from Mt Scopus
(Chatham University Archives, circa 1890)

Jaffa Gate (Chatham University Archives circa 1890)


This Picture of Jaffa Gate has been featured in previous postings when we found it in other collections

We also determined that the photo was taken prior to 1898 because of a glimpse of the moat wall on the right side of the picture.

The wall was torn down and the moat filled in so that the Germany emperor's carriage could enter. 






Damascus Gate   (Chatham University Archives)
View other historical (black and white) pictures of the Damascus Gate at our previous posting.

There are no pictures of the Zion, Dung and Herod Gates of the Old City. The "New Gate" of the Old City, an entrance built for access into the Christian Quarter, was constructed in 1889, after the photographs were taken.


Lions Gate, also known as St. Stephen's Gate
(Chatham University Archives)

The "lions" carved on both sides of the gate are actually panthers, the symbol of the Mamluk Sultan Baybars (1223-1277). The panthers were believed to have been part of a Mamluki structure and placed at the gate by Suleiman to commemorate the Ottoman victory over the Mamluks in 1517.  View an earlier posting on Lions Gate here


The sealed Sha'ar Harachamim, or the Golden Gate, taken from Gethsemane Garden  
(Chatham University Archives)

See our previous feature on 
Sha'ar Harachamim and the graves 
beneath it here.

Lance Wallnau - 7-Mountain Message - Prophetic Perspective





Changing Perspective








Dave Yarnes & Lance Wallnau

Aired: Monday, November 25, 2013


The foundation of the 7-mountain message is seeing the church outside of its traditional boundaries. We need to broaden our focus on the kingdom.





The Lord is letting those in business, education, government and beyond, know that He has you there for His Kingdom purposes. It isn't a "second-class" job. We are to take the mountain we are in, for His Kingdom purposes and to reach the nations.