The opening words of the Priestly Blessing sounded different than usual. More relevant. More to the point.
The service ended at 9:15 and everyone quickly headed home with the usual fellowship and banter after services. Upon arrival home, my son-in-law, an officer in a combat unit, who together with my daughter is expecting their first child in 6 months, received a message that he was to gather his things and report for duty immediately. In moments he was packed up and had driven off on a shabbat-festival when it is otherwise forbidden to drive our cars.
My 19-year-old son, currently serving in a combat infantry unit, was home for the festival. He received his message a few minutes later, told to pack a bag and be prepared. He told me that at some point he would need me to drive him to where the bus would take him back to base. We waited. A few hours later, the call came. For the first time in my life, I drove my car on the Sabbath, usually considered a grave violation of the Biblical commandment to refrain from lighting any manner of fire on the Sabbath day. But for life-saving purposes, the Sabbath restrictions are superseded.
While we were on the way, my son told me that the situation was far worse than anyone knew yet. Remember, we did not know the news. His messages from the army had informed him that many were killed, Israeli towns had fallen into the hands of Hamas murderers, and the Sderot police stations had been captured. I could not believe what I was hearing.
When we arrived at the Bet Shemesh train station parking lot where he would be picked up, there were a few other soldiers there being dropped off. I wasn’t the only one in my festive clothes dropping off my son to go into combat.
When I arrived home in the evening, my 25-year-old son, a reservist in a combat infantry unit, had been called as well. He was packing up, to be picked up soon by a fellow reservist to head to base. Later that evening, my 24-year-old daughter, a combat medic in the Homefront Command, was told to be ready. Early the next morning her call came. I drove her to Kiryat Gat to meet her ride down to Gaza. My son-in-law, two of my sons, and my daughter were all now on their way into a combat zone.
Exactly 50 years ago, Israel’s enemies chose the Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur, to attack us. And now, here we were, once again reminded by our enemies that this is fundamentally a spiritual war. Do these Hamas terrorists think they will destroy the State of Israel with these attacks? Do they think they will improve the lives of their population this way? Of course not. That is not their goal.
When the nation of Israel left Egypt, after God had decimated the mighty Egyptian empire with the Ten Plagues and then drowned their army in the Red Sea, Amalek attacked. Did Amalek really think they would defeat the children of Israel? Did they not know what happened to Egypt? The answer is that they didn’t care. They wanted to kill Jews, plain and simple. More to the point, Amalek, and the other nations who stood in the way of the children of Israel during their journey, were trying to prevent the nation of Israel from possessing the land promised to us by God.
For all the geopolitical analysis we will read in the coming days, the conflict is actually quite simple. Nothing has changed since Amalek after the Exodus. The Hamas charter calls for the murder of Jews and for the eradication of the entire Jewish state. This is not about any “occupied territory” or “two-state solution.” The enemies of Israel want to destroy us. And they seek to prevent us from building our nation in the land of Israel.
If history is any guide, the coming days and weeks will find Israel increasingly criticized and pressured by governments and media around the world. It is a moment of truth for our leaders. May God grant them the courage to see this fight through to the end. But it is also a moment of truth for all people of faith. Those who would seek to prevent the Jewish people from living in the land of Israel stand opposed to God’s promises and plan for the world. To speak up for Israel at this time is to stand for the truth of God’s word when it matters most.
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War signifies coming of Jacob's trouble - Rapture, Confirmation of covenant/tribulation
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