Tuesday, September 30, 2014

JERUSALEM365 - Serving God Through Joy and Song ✡ "Be Glad and Exult With All Your Heart"

Sing, O daughter of Zion!  Sound the trumpet, O Israel! Be glad and exult with all your heart, O daughter of Jerusalem!

ZEPHANIAH (3:14)
 

רָנִּי בַּת צִיּוֹן הָרִיעוּ יִשְׂרָאֵל שִׂמְחִי וְעָלְזִי בְּכָל לֵב בַּת יְרוּשָׁלִָם

צפניה ג:יד

ra-nee bat tzee-on ha-ree-u yees-ra-ayl seem-khee v'-al'-zee b'-khol layv bat y'-ru-sha-la-yeem

Jerusalem Inspiration

The prophet Zephaniah, one of the 12 minor prophets, calls for song and praise over the redemption of Jerusalem. The Torah itself rejects a stern and ascetic approach towards religion, and commands us to serve God in happiness and love. As Yom Kippur approaches, our days are filled with conflicting emotions; the understandable fear of judgement day, as well as comfort and satisfaction knowing that God seeks to shower us with blessing, and wants us to worship him with joy and love. Learn more about bestowing blessings in our free eBook!
 

Worshipping With Joy and Song

Check out this video of young men singing in the streets of Jerusalem.  They are singing the words "ivdu et Hashem b'simcha", worship God with happiness. Join in!
 

Providing the Positive

We are barraged with pessimism and disapproval at every turn. Positive words provide a counterbalance. One man does something to provide this counterbalance.
 

Hebrew Music Compilation

Enjoy some of Israel’s most popular songs in this special collector’s set of 2 Hebrew Music CD’s. With a focus on inspiring songs with biblical passages, its song booklet contains English translation and transliteration, to give you a wonderful opportunity to learn Hebrew.
 

Jerusalem Daily Photo

Today's picture by Sharon Gabay depicts musicians performing at the entrance to the Mahane Yehuda Market in downtown Jerusalem. The musicians bring joy to the shoppers who come to the market and toss a few coins in their cup in recognition of their efforts.
 

Thank You

Please help us continue to spread the beauty and significance of Jerusalem!
 

“Thank You Again For the Inspiration and Beautiful Pictures

It’s great to hear from you and make new friends from all over the world. Please send me an email and let me know how you are enjoying Jerusalem365 (don’t forget to say where you are from!). Boker Tov, I have only just started to receive your mail, and so enjoy the “Scenes and inspirations from Jerusalem” with the English verse, then the Hebrew.  I am trying to learn Hebrew, and this helps me. Thank you again for the inspiration and beautiful pictures. God Bless you, Gwenneth Scholtz, Margate, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa.

No weapon formed against you shall prosper. Our God is for you. May the Lord's face continue shining upon you. -Chris, South Africa
Blessing from Jerusalem,
Rabbi Tuly Weisz
RabbiTuly@Israel365.com
Copyright © 2014 Jerusalem365, All rights reserved.
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34 Nahal Ein Gedi Apt #17
Beit Shemesh 9909875
Israel

ISRAEL365 - Israel Photo Trivia ✡ "Avert the Evil Decree"

On Rosh Hashana it is written and on Yom Kippur it is sealed...but repentance, prayer and charity can avert the evil decree.

YOM KIPPUR PRAYERS
 

בְּראשׁ הַשָּׁנָה יִכָּתֵבוּן וּבְיום צום כִּפּוּר יֵחָתֵמוּן... וּתְשׁוּבָה וּתְפִלָּה וּצְדָקָה מַעֲבִירִין אֶת רעַ הַגְּזֵרָה

יום כפור תפילות


b'-rosh ha-sha-na yi-ka-tay-vun u-v'-yom tzum ki-pur yay-kha-tay-mun ... u-t'-shu-va u-t'-fi-la u-tz'-da-ka ma-a-vee-reen et ro-a ha-g'-zay-ra

Today's Israel Inspiration

We're now in the holiest period of the Jewish calendar, the 10 days between Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur when God judges all of mankind and determines what will occur in the upcoming year. Not only are our own fortunes decided, but the fate of countries and nations hangs in the balance and any one good deed can push the scales in favor of blessing and life. We therefore go out of our way to find any opportunity we can to pray harder, repent sincerely, and give charity in order to be signed and sealed in the Book of Life.
 

Israel365 Presents: Jumpin' Jerusalem

Share the significance of Yom Kippur with the next generation! In our video for children, you'll learn what Yom Kippur means in Hebrew, and why Jews wear white clothing and fast on our holiest day of the year.
 

Providing the Positive

We are barraged with pessimism and disapproval at every turn. Positive words provide a counterbalance. One man does something to provide this counterbalance.
 

Hatikva Art Print

The Israeli flag takes on new meaning with this gorgeous work of art  called "micro-calligraphy" - a picture completed entirely with the words of Hatikva! This unique and affordable gift will bring a piece of Zion into your home.

Israel Photo Trivia

Today's photo by Yehoshua Halevi shows a portion of a Torah scroll. Do you know the Hebrew name for the silver pointer shown, and why we use it? Send me an email or post your answer on Facebook
Answer will be posted in tomorrow's email!
 

Thank You

Please help us continue to spread the beauty and significance of the Land of Israel!
 

“A Joy Each Morning!”

We are excited to introduce our newest feature, Sunday Snapshots featuring you! Send usyour best Israel photograph with a description, if possible, and don't forget to include your name and where you are from!
 
Thank you for Israel365, it is a joy each morning! Shalom, Stephanie

Dear Rabbi, I pray for you, Israel, IDF and the Jewish people all day. Staying in touch with us all over the world. Eva, Czech Republic
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
34 Nahal Ein Gedi Apt #17
Beit Shemesh 9909875
Israel

Sharing Love From Sweden - "In the Storm" by Eva Haglund

IN THE STORM

In this life on earth we have not been promised as Christians to live without being in difficulties sometimes. That is like a film but not reality. Many times fruit can come out of difficulties. 

When we are in difficulties we sometimes draw nearer to God and seek Him more then we would do otherwise. Sometimes in pain it forms us for a burden for things to do. Thoughts and visions, can also be born in pain. People who sing or write poems sometimes do so in the valley. 

God also can  use difficulties to form our character. We can learn things for help when we meet other people needing our counsel. If we have suffered in one way we can learn to see others who suffer in the same way and know how to meet them. In Isaiah 53:11 is written, "He shall see the labor of his soul and be satisfied.".

When Jesus suffered for us He saw fruit. When we have suffered we can see fruit that will be used in help for other people.  Sometimes we can feel abandoned but we are not abandoned in difficulties. Our names are written in His hands and He is so close. God is a refuge and we are under His wings. When we feel alone we can seek the Lord more and learn to know Him more as our Friend. God can give back in relations about friendship.


We can read in Job that Job went through a test of his faith in the difficulties in Job 1. The devil wanted Job to leave God when he faced many trials but he refused. Job's wife wanted him to curse God in the difficulty. She said in Job 2:9  "Do you still hold fast to your integrity? Curse God and die!" But Job did not listen to her. In the end after the test he got back. 

Joseph also suffered also very much. He was hated by his brothers, sold and in a prison, though innocent for years. But he never left God and God gave him back.

In Isaiah 61:7 we see,  "Instead of your shame you will have double honor." We can get double back.
When we feel weak we can think about that God is our strength. In Ps 66: 10 is written about God testing us, "For you, O God have tested us, you have refined us as silver is refined" and in verse 12 "We went through fire and through water but You brought us out to rich fulfillment." God can bring us out of everything.

In Isaiah 43:2 we see "When you pass through the waters, I will be with you. And through the rivers, they shall not owerflow you. When you walk through the fire, you shall not be burned. Nor shall the flame scorch you." God protects you from getting drowned and burned in fire but also when you walk through difficulties. At times we can feel like a fire that we will go through, as did the Israelites also went through the sea and came to the other side. But God was with them and they survived.

We need to stand on  God's  promises in the Bible in different situations.  It is written in Isaiah 54:10 "For the mountains shall depart and the hills be removed, but My kindness shall not depart from you. Nor shall My covenant of peace be removed, says the Lord who has mercy on you." It can feel like this  for us in a difficulty, but then God is with us and His grace has not left us, but His covenant of peace shall not be moved, nor His mercy. He is with us and can help us. 

David also went through different trials and not always an easy way. When he was with the sheep he could feel alone but he drew near to God and it was a strength to worship Him. He learned to take care of the sheep not just when it was easy but to protect them from animals who were dangerous. God prepared him for other things ahead of him and difficulties, too.


When we follow Christ we can meet persecution. In Luke 5:22 is written "Blessed are you when men hate you, and when they exclude you, and revile you, and cast out your name as evil for the Son of Man`s sake. Rejoice in that day and leap for joy! For indeed your reward is great in heaven, for in like manner their fathers did to the prophets." We get a reward in heaven if we are persecuted for His name`s sake.

Rev. 2:10 says "Be faithful until death, and I will give you the crown of life." Paul went through many difficulties. He was beaten and stoned. He knew what it was to go through sufferings. We can also have spiritual attacks and pressure.

 I think we are in a time where there can come more persecutions but also in a time when there will be more strong things from God. God as Person is most important and I think we will see more worship and more of His power. I think when we are in the storm we need to rejoice in the Lord. When it is tough we need to worship. Worship is a help when it is tough.

In Acts 16:25 we can read: "But at midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the prisoners were listening to them." We understand that they were singing to Jesus when they were in prison. It was a strength. We can also see in the text that after this was an earthquake and the foundations of the prison were shaken. Spiritual things happen when we worship, when we lift up Jesus and He is in the center.

I also have noticed that when you are in the storm that you feel better when you dance to Him. I love to dance to God and I think it is a help when it is tough. In Psalm 140:2 is written "Let Israel rejoice in their Maker. Let the children of Zion be joyful in their King. Let them praise His name with the dance." Here we can learn to rejoice in God. The text say that dance can be a way to praise God. It is worshiping God with the body.

When we are in  storms in life it is important to read the Word, which is our daily Bread. We can stand on God's promises in His Word. His Word is steady, more than the mountains and strong like a fire. It is good to speak His Word loud  in the "stormy weather." In the difficulties we need to take time with God. It is good to learn to know His voice and it needs time with Him. When we read the Word much and learn to know God more as a person that it is easier to hear  His voice inside. God also speaks to us reading the Bible. There is also an audio Bible some listen to. We need the Word in difficulties. 

There is also much comfort in the Bible and we need these words of comfort. In Ps 23:4 we read,
"Yeah, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for You are with me, Your rod and Your staff they comfort me." In 1 Cor:3 we also read that God is a God of comfort.  
It is important to know that Jesus loves us so much in our different situations. His name means salvation. He can help us in  difficulties. He who receives Jesus/Yeshua receives Him with a name who means salvation. It is salvation for eternity in His name. It means hope.

When we are in the valley it is good to read about Jesus' sufferings. It shows how much Jesus suffered for us because of His love. He also knows what it is to be badly treated. He was badly treated for us. He went through this suffering by free will for us. It is good when we suffer to know that Jesus was scourged for us because He loves us so much. He also was abandoned by people as we as human beings can experience. He suffered because of His love and felt the deepest pain of rejection at the cross for us. He loves us so much and this is important to know in the storm.  He was crucified in deep pain because of His love to us.


He showed us how to show love for each other. John 15:12-13 "This is My commandment that you love one another as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this than to lay down one`s life for his friends." It is written in the Bible to carry each other's burdens. We need each other also in the stormy weather. Jesus is a Friend who is close in things. We read in Romans 8 that nothing can separate us from His love.

To believe in Jesus/Yeshua  means hope in eternity for people. He is our hope.

Eva Haglund

World War I in the Middle East - I'd Walk 100 Miles with My Camel

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


Posted: 29 Sep 2014

Volunteer Arab Camel Corps led by Turkish officers leaving Jerusalem (circa (1915)
The scope of the World War I battles in Palestine are simply not understood by most students of the Middle East today.  The Turkish, German, Austrian, British, ANZAC and Indian forces numbered in the hundreds of thousands. 


Mounted troops from the Australian, British, New Zealand and Indian battalions of the Imperial Camel Corps

To provide some perspective, we present pictures of one of the most utilized tools of that war -- the camel.  Tens of thousands were used in the war in Palestine.
Australian camel corps hat pin

The difficult terrain of the Sinai, the Jordan Valley, and the Samarian/Judean hills required extensive use of the sturdy and powerful four-legged "supply truck."


Consider this report by a New Zealand officer in his book With the Cameliers in Palestine:

In the advance up the coastal plain in Palestine, in November, 1917, General Allenby used thirty thousand (30,000) camels for carrying food, water and ammunition to the troops of one portion of the eastern force of his army. 
Turkish account of the war, and specifically the 1914-1915 campaign against the British on the Suez Canal, describes the forces and the logistical nightmare of crossing the Sinai desert:
Turkish Camel Corps in Be'er Sheva, 1915

The gathering point for the VIII Corps was Beersheba, which was inland, well away from the reach of British naval artillery. From there, 25,000 men would march 300 kilometres across the desert and reach Ismailia. However, this was nothing but a mission impossible. Moreover, every man was allowed one kilogram of food and drink water per day and this meant that they needed 15,000 camels. But what they had was just 2,000 animals. [Commander] Cemil Paşa mentioned this problem in his memoirs as follows: “I think there are many people who are wandering why we couldn't find the required 15,000 camels in a place like Syria and Hejaz.  We had to find 14,000 camels within one month.” Five kilograms of barley and 18 kilograms of water were allowed per horse and three kilograms of barley and five kilograms of water was allowed per camel.
British Imperial Camel Corps outside of Be'er Sheva on November 1, 
1917, during the critical battle to capture the Turkish outpost and wells 
The Turkish account continues, describing the Turkish army's strength after difficult battles in Gaza and prior to the British General Allenby's move north into Palestine: As of May 1917, the Ottoman Fourth Army was consisting of 174,908 men, 36,225 animals, 5,351 camels, 145,840 rifles, 187 machine guns and 282 artillery pieces.


Click on pictures to enlarge. Click on captions to view the original pictures.

World War I combat ambulances. Camels carrying wounded Turkish soldiers -- two per camel 
on a litter called a "kankalah" or "cacolet." (1917, Ottoman Imperial Archives) See also here

Wounded Australian cavalrymen on their way to
medical attention (Australian War Memorial)


The following description is from 
"With the Cameliers in Palestine:"

The field ambulance, instead of using wheeled vehicles, transported the sick and wounded in "caco-lets," on the backs of camels. These consisted of two canvas stretchers balanced horizontally, one on each side of a specially constructed saddle. In these the wounded men could either sit or lie at full length, and were shaded from the sun by a small canvas hood. The jolting 
Indian army's camel ambulances
motion of the camel frequently was most trying to the badly wounded men, but it was sometimes a case of this kind of carriage, or death, and these camel cacolets, going as they did where wheeled transport was impossible, undoubtedly were the means of saving the lives of many wounded men who otherwise would have had a poor chance of being carried back to safety. 



Only male camels were used in the 
German soldiers loading wounded onto an "ambulance," 1918
Camel Brigade. It would have been an unworkable system to have mixed the sexes, as in the East no mutilation of male animals, either horses, donkeys or camels for sterilisation purposes, is ever practised by the Mohammedans. 









British Imperial Camel Corps "ambulances" in action, 1916

Horses generally have a strong dislike for camels, but this dislike can be overcome by daily contact. Some of the officers of higher rank of each battalion used horses during part of the campaign, and these soon grew quite accustomed to the company of their more ungainly associates.


Turkish army camel convoy, 1917. The caption in the Harvard University places the picture near the modern 
northern Israeli town of Afula in the Jezreel Valley. The body of water, however, suggests it was taken near the 
Hula Valley swamps which was sparsely populated by a Bedouin tribe living in reed huts, likely pictured here.

Turkish officers at David's Citadel in Jerusalem


Turkish camel corps in Jerusalem



















Original captionThe Camel Transport of the Australian Light Horse at the railhead dump, on the Philistine Plain (near Ashkelon). The camels are seen on their way to the forward area, loaded with Australian frozen mutton for the troops. In the background can be seen the tent camp.