Friday, December 26, 2025

A Prophetic Call Home: Why Israel Is Urging Jews Worldwide To Return


A Prophetic Call Home: Why Israel Is Urging Jews Worldwide To Return

PNW STAFF


Against the backdrop of rising antisemitism and growing global instability, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar has issued a call that echoes both history and prophecy: Jews around the world should return home to Israel.

Speaking at the "J-50" Forum--an initiative Sa'ar launched in May to maintain direct, ongoing dialogue with Jewish leaders worldwide--he urged Jews in the United Kingdom, Australia, France, Canada, and Belgium to make Aliyah, the return to the Jewish homeland.

"We stand for the right of every Jew to live in security anywhere," Sa'ar said. "But today, I am calling on Jews...to immigrate to Israel." He continued, "We have learned lessons from our history. I believe it is my duty to do so and to enable Jews to raise their children in a non-hostile environment, in their true home: the Land of Israel."

The statement was not made lightly. It reflects a sobering reality: Jewish communities across the West are increasingly feeling like guests in societies that once promised tolerance but now offer uncertainty, intimidation, and, in some cases, open hostility.

Why Israel Is Making This Call Now

The surge in antisemitism since October 7 has been dramatic and global. Jewish neighborhoods have been targeted, synagogues vandalized, students harassed on university campuses, and public expressions of Jewish identity discouraged or outright attacked. In cities once considered among the safest in the world for Jewish life, families now ask whether it is wise to wear a yarmulke, display a mezuzah, or speak openly about Israel.

Israel was founded precisely to answer moments like this.

The modern Jewish state exists not only as a political entity but as a permanent refuge--a homeland meant to ensure that Jews would never again be entirely dependent on the goodwill of others for their survival. Sa'ar's appeal reflects that founding logic: history shows that antisemitism rarely remains contained, and warnings ignored too often come too late.

Israel also has national and demographic reasons for encouraging Aliyah. The strength, identity, and future of the Jewish state are inseparable from Jewish presence. Danielle Mor of the Jewish Agency estimates that roughly eight million Jews worldwide are eligible to make Aliyah, and the agency's leadership is actively planning for up to one million new immigrants over the next five years.

Israel Preparing for a Mass Return

What makes this moment especially striking is that Sa'ar's call does not exist in isolation. Earlier this year, Israeli officials quietly acknowledged that Israel has been actively preparing for the possibility of mass Aliyah--a large, sudden influx of Jews driven not by idealism alone, but by crisis.

Housing infrastructure, employment absorption programs, Hebrew-language training, and social services have all been discussed in anticipation of future global events that could place severe pressure on Jewish communities abroad. The assumption underlying these preparations is stark: Israel believes the world may be entering a period where Jewish life outside the homeland becomes increasingly difficult.

This is not alarmism. It is institutional memory. Israel's leaders understand that Jewish history tends to move suddenly, not gradually. Borders close. Moods shift. What feels unthinkable one year becomes unavoidable the next. Preparing now is seen as a moral responsibility.


The Prophetic Dimension

From a biblical perspective, the return of the Jewish people to their land is one of the most profound developments of the modern era. Scripture repeatedly speaks of Israel being regathered from the nations. Yet the fulfillment we see today is incomplete.

Roughly half of the world's Jews still live outside Israel. The ingathering is underway--but not finished.

More importantly, Jewish spiritual life has not yet been fully restored. The Temple, once the heart of Jewish worship, has not been rebuilt. Sacrificial worship has not resumed. Jerusalem remains spiritually contested. The prophetic vision involves not only people in the land, but a people restored in faith, worship, and covenant identity.

Since October 7, something has shifted. Synagogues are fuller. Prayer has intensified. There is renewed discussion--once considered fringe--about the Temple. Trauma has driven many Israelis to seek meaning beyond military strength or political alliances.

Yet Scripture and history suggest restoration often follows persecution. Israel's greatest returns have come after its darkest hours. Exile preceded return. Pressure preceded awakening.

It is a painful truth, but one deeply woven into the biblical narrative: widespread antisemitism, though evil and unjust, has often been the force that drives the Jewish people back to their land.

A Moment Heavy With Meaning

Sa'ar's call is not merely a diplomatic message--it is a signal. Israel is watching the world carefully. It is preparing. And it is calling its people home.

Whether driven by fear or faith, necessity or destiny, the movement continues. The modern State of Israel remains a miracle still unfolding, a restoration still incomplete.

And as Jews around the world weigh their future, the question lingers--not just politically, but prophetically: are we witnessing the next stage of a return that began generations ago, but has not yet reached its final chapter?


UK: Majority of Jews have considered leaving the country over rising Islamic antisemitism


North Korea Shows Off iIs First Nuclear Submarine


North Korea shows off its first nearly-complete nuclear submarine (PHOTO)
RT


Pyongyang has shared new images of its first nearly completed nuclear-powered strategic missile submarine as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un personally inspected the vessel. 

Kim hailed its construction as an “epoch-making crucial change,” the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported on Thursday.

During his visit, Kim oversaw the construction of the 8,700-tonnage strategic guided missile submarine and vowed to continue to equip the DPRK’s navy with nuclear missiles.

Kim linked the need to bolster the country’s offensive power with South Korea’s plan to develop its own nuclear submarine, which has recently been approved by the US. The North Korean leader claimed Seoul’s plans violate Pyongyang’s security and maritime sovereignty.

He warned that North Korea’s enemies will be “forced to pay a dear price when they violate the security of the DPRK’s strategic sovereignty” and will face a “merciless retaliatory attack if they try to select a military option.”

KCNA reported that Kim was also briefed on the on-going research and development of new “underwater secret weapons.”

The development of the new submarine comes amid heightened tensions on the Korean peninsula, with Pyongyang accusing the US, South Korea, and Japan of undermining its national security and destabilizing the region by attempting to create an “Asian version of NATO” and conducting joint military exercises. 

Seoul and Washington have repeatedly insisted on the denuclearization of the peninsula. In October, South Korean President Lee Jae Myung also urged Beijing to play a “constructive role” in establishing peace and finding “a substantive solution to the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue.” 

Pyongyang, however, has stated that its nuclear armed forces will “exist forever” as a means of defending its sovereignty, territorial integrity and fundamental interests, dismissing denuclearization as a “pipedream.”



The Verse That Defined 2025 & The Generation Turning Back To God


The Verse That Defined 2025 & The Generation Turning Back To God
PNW STAFF


If you wanted to understand the spiritual condition of 2025, you wouldn't need a poll, a think tank, or a political forecast. You could simply open the Bible app.

There, highlighted, shared, bookmarked, and reread more than any other passage on earth, sits a single verse--quiet, ancient, and unyielding in its relevance:

"So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand." -- Isaiah 41:10

In a year dominated by anxiety, instability, cultural upheaval, and the growing sense that the modern world is coming apart at the seams, Isaiah 41:10 has emerged as the most-read Scripture of 2025 on the YouVersion Bible App. It is the fourth time in six years the verse has claimed the top spot--but this year, its rise feels different. Heavier. More urgent. More personal.

This is not the verse of a comfortable culture. It is the verse of a fearful one.

Isaiah 41:10 does not offer shallow optimism or vague reassurance. It does not deny the darkness. Instead, it confronts fear head-on--and then overwhelms it with presence. I am with you. Not an idea. Not a philosophy. A God who enters the fear with us. A God who strengthens weak hands and steadies shaking hearts.

That message has never felt more necessary.

According to YouVersion, Bible engagement reached historic highs in 2025. The app surpassed one billion downloads. Easter Sunday alone saw nearly 19 million people engage with Scripture. January 5 became the biggest day ever for installs--until it was surpassed later in the year. Bible plans surged. Daily usage climbed in every region of the world.

But perhaps the most surprising--and culturally significant--trend is who is driving this surge.

Young people.

For years, cultural commentators insisted that Gen Z was leaving faith behind. Yet in 2025, the data tells a very different story. Younger users are opening the Bible in record numbers, downloading Scripture apps, buying physical Bibles, and--most unexpectedly--walking back into churches.

For many, this renewed search for truth intensified after the death of Charlie Kirk earlier this year. Whatever one thinks of him politically, his sudden death landed like a shockwave among young Americans already struggling with questions of meaning, courage, and mortality. Social media, usually drenched in irony and detachment, filled instead with grief, reflection, and something deeper: existential questioning.

When the illusion of permanence cracks, people start asking eternal questions.

And many didn't turn to pundits or platforms for answers. They turned to Scripture.

That context helps explain why fear--rather than success, self-fulfillment, or prosperity--became the defining biblical theme of the year. In previous seasons, verses like Jeremiah 29:11 or Romans 8:28 often dominated, reflecting cultural confidence or forward-looking optimism. During the pandemic, Psalms of refuge surged as people searched for shelter in chaos.

But 2025 is not a year of optimism. It is a year of exposure.

Institutions feel hollow. Digital life feels performative. Artificial intelligence is advancing faster than ethics can keep up. Economic pressures are mounting. War and instability dominate headlines. Young people, in particular, are exhausted by a culture that promises freedom but delivers anxiety.

Against that backdrop, Isaiah 41:10 does not promise escape. It promises endurance. It does not say the storm will pass quickly. It says God will hold you while it rages.

That is why this verse keeps rising to the top.

Bobby Gruenewald, YouVersion's founder, described the trend simply: people are drawn to the assurance that they are not alone. But the implications run far deeper. This is not casual curiosity. This is a generation testing whether God's Word still holds when everything else feels unstable.

The surge in Bible sales and church attendance reinforces the point. Digital engagement is translating into embodied faith. People are not just scrolling Scripture--they are building habits around it. They are listening, highlighting, sharing, and returning. Technology, often blamed for spiritual decay, has become--unexpectedly--a conduit for revival.

And the ripple effects matter.

Scripture engagement does not stay confined to screens. It reshapes homes, friendships, and moral imagination. It reintroduces language of courage, sacrifice, truth, and hope into a culture starved for meaning. When millions of people anchor themselves in a verse that begins with "Do not fear," it signals that fear has not won the final word.

Isaiah 41:10 is not trending because it is comforting. It is trending because it is true. In a year when many discovered how fragile their assumptions were, this ancient promise stood firm.

The most-read verse of 2025 tells us exactly where we are--and perhaps where we are going. Not toward certainty. Not toward control. But toward dependence on a God who still says, I will uphold you.

And in an age defined by fear, that may be the most radical message of all.




Thursday, December 25, 2025

Widespread Flooding In Southern California: Updates


Live updates: Mountain mudslide damage extensive, SoCal storm still a threat


The atmospheric river storm that has unleashed heavy downpours across Southern California — with some areas seeing more than a half-foot — is continuing to drench the region on Thursday, Christmas Day.

Widespread flooding has been reported from the storm, and mandatory evacuation orders have been issued for several communities, especially those in burn scar zones. Several roads, including a vital portion of the 5 Freeway in the San Fernando Valley, were shut down after being inundated with water.According to the National Weather Service, the “long duration atmospheric river event” is not over yet. In fact, NWS projections indicate that, in addition to Christmas Eve, Christmas Day will see the heaviest rainfall.” Much of the region had already received 2 to 6 inches of rain as of Thursday morning.

“Two more impulses will move through the area [Thursday] and Friday and will bring periods of showers and a slight chance of thunderstorms,” the National Weather Service said. “The potential for flooding will be high during this period.”

Showers are expected to taper off by late Friday evening, with dry weather returning for the weekend, the Weather Service said. Several watches, warnings and advisories remained in effect for different parts of SoCal. Click here to view them.

Snow levels, which remained above the 7,500-foot range on Wednesday, were expected to drop to around 6,500 feet on Thursday. By Friday, levels are expected to drop further, bringing some decent accumulations at resort elevations.

Wrightwood mudslide damage

The extent of damage caused by rain-triggered mudslides in Wrightwood, California, came into sharper focus Thursday afternoon when the San Bernardino County Fire Department released video showing homes and cars buried under several feet of thick mud and rocks. VIDEO & Details: https://ktla.com/weather/new-video-shows-homes-buried-in-wrightwood-mudslides-after-massive-storm/

4 HOURS AGO

Highway and lane closure updates

Caltrans District 7 announced Thursday morning that several closures due to the storm have since been lifted. As of 8:30 a.m., the following locations had been opened:

    • All lanes of the 5 Freeway near Lankershim Boulevard (three nearby on-ramps remain closed: southbound Lankershim, southbound Calgrove Boulevard and northbound Tuxford Street) 
    • Tejon Pass rest area
    • State Route 138 in Ventura County


    As of that time, however, there were still some closures in effect: 

    • 101 Freeway: Left lane closed in both directions between California Street and Seaward Avenue in Ventura
    • State Route 2 (Angeles Crest Highway): Full closure for 12 miles west of State Route 39 
    • Topanga Canyon Boulevard: Full closure between Grand View Drive and Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu
    • State Route 33: Full closure between Fairview Road and Lockwood Valley Road in Ojai


    More...