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Israel's History Written in Advance
Written by Robert C. Newman
Condensed by Rich Milne
According to an old story, the powerful Prussian King Frederick the
Great had a chaplain who was a Bible-believer, though Frederick
himself was a rationalist. One day, Frederick challenged his
chaplain, "In a word, give me a good argument for the God of the
Bible." His chaplain, a knowledgeable man, responded, "The Jew,
your majesty!" To unpack the chaplain's concise remark is the
purpose of this essay.
Neglected Evidence for the God of the Bible
The history of the Jews is a demonstration of God at work,
sometimes miraculously, sometimes providentially, in the affairs of
men and nations. The particular significance of the Jews--in
contrast to other nations--is that God called Israel His special
people and made covenants with them through Abraham, Moses, and
David. In addition, the Old Testament predicts what God planned to
do with His people. We'll look at three rather wide-ranging
prophecies about the nation Israel and see how they have come to
pass. These involve first, the covenant curses; second, an acted
parable of the marital relations between God and Israel; and
finally, a prediction of Israel's return to her own land.
The first area of prophecy involves what God promised to do to the
nation of Israel if they did not keep the laws Moses had given them
from Mt. Sinai.
When the Israelites were rescued from slavery in Egypt about 1,400
B.C., God made a contract or covenant with Moses to define Israel's
relationship to Him as His own special people. This covenant
reminded them of what God had already done for them and what He
promised to do in the future. God had saved them from slavery,
brought them safely through the desert, was about to bring them
into possession of the land of Canaan, and would protect them from
all disasters if they would be faithful to Him. To test their
faithfulness, God gave them an elaborate set of laws--some moral,
some civil, some ceremonial--which also set them apart from the
nations around them. God showed His reality through the lifestyle
that He had designed for Israel. In Deuteronomy 4:5-8 Moses
explained it:
See, I have taught you decrees and laws as the LORD my
God commanded me, so that you may follow them in the land you are
entering to take possession of it. Observe them carefully, for this
will show your wisdom and understanding to the nations, who will
hear about these decrees and say, `Surely this great nation is a
wise and understanding people.'
Moses goes on to say only Israel has a God who is near when they
pray, and only His people have such righteous laws to guide them.
In the 28th chapter of Deuteronomy and the 26th chapter of
Leviticus, the provisions of the covenant are set out in the form
of blessings and curses--blessings if Israel would obey God's
commands and curses if they disobeyed. Through these sanctions,
Israel would be reminded of how they were doing in obeying God, and
their neighbors would see an objective demonstration of God's
judgment in history.
Israel as a History Lesson
Israel's history demonstrates that when they broke the laws God
gave them, they experienced exactly the results God predicted would
happen if they were unfaithful. No other nation has prophesied its
own downfall with such accuracy. Thus history demonstrates how
accurately God predicted what would happen to Israel if they
disobeyed His laws. And what did God predict? To summarize nearly
a hundred verses, Israel's disobedience brought wasted effort in
labors; natural disasters such as drought, blight, and locusts to
their crops; and disease and death to their animals and themselves.
Their enemies would defeat them in battle and besiege their cities,
resulting in plague, famine, cannibalism, and starvation. They
would be scattered to foreign countries. There some would die;
others would live in constant fear of both real and imagined
disasters, or turn to other gods. They would be sold as slaves.
Their numbers would decline greatly, as they suffered from fearful
plagues, prolonged disasters, and lingering illnesses. What an
amazing list of disasters!
Not only are these curses severe, but the Bible predicts them in
some detail. In Deuteronomy, fourteen verses describe the blessings
and fifty-four the curses. In Leviticus, eleven verses are
blessings and thirty-two are curses. Altogether, over 75 percent of
the verses concern curses for disobedience. God- predicted
disasters will be a major part of Israel's future.
This proportion is very unusual. Other religious people might
concede that their own history had been three-fourths disaster, but
who would admit it had been three-fourths disobedient? And this
proportion is borne out not only by the history of Israel recorded
in the Bible, where one might claim the biblical history writers
either molded the narrative to match the prophecy or adjusted the
prophecy to match the history. It is also demonstrated in the long
history of disaster experienced by the Jews after the Bible was
written.
No other national group has experienced such disaster as the Jews.
Most nations have not survived long enough to experience so much
disaster! Yet Israel has experienced disaster at every point
sketched in the long lists of Leviticus and Deuteronomy. They have,
unfortunately, been persecuted again and again for over two
thousand years. For most of that time they were without a national
homeland, having been driven out of Palestine. They have faced
decimation and sometimes genocide from nearly every group they have
lived among: Greeks, Romans, Christians, Muslims, Nazis, and
Communists. Even now the recently re-established nation of Israel
faces continual harassment and threats of annihilation from hostile
forces all around her.
In the midst of these curses, however, comes a promise that Israel
will not be totally destroyed.
Yet in spite of this, when they are in the land of
their enemies, I will not reject them or abhor them so as to
destroy them completely, breaking my covenant with them. I am the
LORD their God (Lev. 26:44).
But as predicted, the Jews still exist as a people today. "Of
course!" you say. "If Israel had been destroyed, we would never
have heard of them." Not true -- unless they had been destroyed
before the coming of Jesus. With the rise of Christianity, the Old
Testament was preserved by non-Jews and would have survived whether
the Jews survived or not. In fact, many of the threats the Jews
have faced came in the past two thousand years. Yet Israel, unlike
most oppressed nations of antiquity, has survived as a distinct
people.
Thus the evidence from Israel's predicted covenant curses points to
God's activity in history, keeping His words of both judgment and
promise.
Israel's Harlotry
It's easy to miss the book of Hosea in the Old Testament. But it
describes an amazing parable that would picture Israel's situation
for some two thousand years. The prophet Hosea was divinely
directed to live out a powerful parable depicting God's
relationship with Israel.
In chapter 1, Hosea is instructed to marry a harlot, Gomer, and
have children. He obeys, thereby picturing God's choice of the
nation Israel for a personal relationship with Him, even though
Abraham was an idolater when God called him and the Israelites were
idolaters when they were called out of slavery in Egypt.
In chapter 2, Gomer runs off with her lovers. In the same way,
Israel abandoned God for the more sexually exciting worship of the
Canaanites, even though God had brought the people safely into the
promised land. Finally Gomer winds up in slavery, as Israel would
later be taken captive to Assyria and Babylon.
In chapter 3, Hosea is directed to go and buy her back. But she is
to have no relations with Hosea or with her lovers. This last event
in Hosea's living parable is a prediction of the status of Israel
for a long time to come:
For the sons of Israel will remain for many days
without king or prince, without sacrifice or sacred pillar, and
without ephod or household idols. Afterward the sons of Israel will
return and seek the LORD their God and David their king . . . in
the last days (Hos. 3:4-5).
Hosea predicted that Israel for "many days" will lack a king, even
though God had promised that Israel would never lack a descendant
to sit on the throne if the nation was obedient to God.
In fact, the prediction states that Israel will lack even a prince.
Since in Hebrew, "prince" means a government official, not the son
of the king, Israel would lack both government and king.
Hosea also predicts that sacrifice, pillar, ephod, household idols
will be lacking. Two are associated with the sacrificial system and
two with idolatry. Sacrifice was an integral part of Israel's
covenant and worship. The ephod, a sort of vest, was one of the
most important of the ceremonial garments worn by Israel's high
priest. Although some pillars had orthodox uses, the most common
reference is to those used in Canaanite worship. Israel was to lose
both true worship and the false religion which had been such a
problem since it entered Canaan.
This has happened exactly! Since A.D. 44 (the death of Herod
Agrippa I), Israel has had no native king to this day. For 1,878
years, from the fall of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 to the formation of
the modern nation in 1948, Israel had no government of its own
either. Thus the predictions regarding Israel's governmental status
were fulfilled in detail.
With the loss of the Temple and the priestly garments came the end
of the sacrificial system. Israel has not had a high priest to this
day. So Hosea's prophecy about the loss of sacrificial worship has
also proved true.
From A.D. 70 to 1948, the "sons of Israel" lacked all six items
predicted in Hosea 3:4. Now they have a government, but five are
still lacking. Hosea 3:4 has been literally fulfilled.
A Regathering of Israel?
In our own generation we may also be seeing the fulfillment of
Hosea 3:5. Many Jews have physically returned to Palestine in this
century. If their seeking of "God and David their king" is
understood as a turning to Jesus as the true Messiah, we can point
to the growing Messianic Jewish movement which has flourished in
the past two decades. But we are still too close to these events to
be sure.
Whether or not Hosea 3:5 refers to Israel's return to the promised
land, a number of other Old Testament passages do. Let's look at
one such passage, Isaiah 11:11-16. Verse 11 reads:
Then it will happen on that day that the LORD will
again recover the second time with His hand the remnant of His
people, who will remain, from Assyria, Egypt, Pathros, Cush, Elam,
Shinar, Hamath, and from the islands of the sea.
Sometime after Isaiah wrote these words, Israel was to be
regathered to its homeland. The reference to a "second time" as
well as the places from which they would return suggests that this
is not the return from the Babylonian exile.
According to the whole passage, several significant features will
characterize this return. First, verse 13 suggests that Israel will
no longer be two nations as it was after Solomon's time, but a
single unified country . Second, Israel will fight the surrounding
nations (the Philistines, the Edomites, The Moabites, the
Ammonites, and the Egyptians) as a part of this return (vv. 14-15).
Third, something spectacular will happen to dry up the "tongue of
the sea of Egypt" and the "River," presumably the Euphrates (v.15).
Fourth, the places from which the return will take place are
explicitly named, except for the general phrase "islands [or
'coastlands'] of the sea" (v.11).
Of these four items, three have already occurred in the return of
Jews to Israel in our own generation; only the third has not yet
taken place.
The return of Jews to Palestine and the formation of a state of
their own is amazing in itself, given that just a century ago the
territory was controlled by the Muslim Turks who hated the Jews.
Yet a world Zionist movement was formed; the land came under the
control of Britain at the end of World War I; Britain allowed the
Jews to have a homeland; the Nazi holocaust drove Jews to Palestine
who otherwise would have stayed in Europe; the United Nations
agreed to partition Palestine into an Arab and a Jewish state; and
the Jews were able to defeat a coalition of Arab states bent on
their destruction.
The Jewish state formed in 1948 in Palestine included persons
descended from both the northern and southern tribes. The enmity of
the divided kingdoms that existed at Isaiah's time has, in fact,
been healed.
Israel has already fought with all the surrounding nations, in
1948, 1956, 1967, and 1973. Though the Philistines, Edomites, and
such are no longer identifiable as separate peoples, the Arab
nations occupying their lands (and most likely including some of
their descendants) are Egypt, Palestine, Jordan, and Syria. These
were the nations Israel fought and dispossessed to regain its
territory.
Once again, the prophecies of the Bible about the Jews show the God
of the Bible to be true.
In this essay we have examined three significant passages in the
Bible that predict the history of Israel. We have shown that
numerous prophecies from the Old Testament regarding Israel have
been fulfilled. We have made the following observations:
1. The Jews would have fierce and repeated persecution and
disaster. This has been characteristic of the nation for two
thousand years.
2. In spite of such disasters, the Jews would continue to exist as
a recognizable people group, in spite of treatment which has
destroyed other such people groups.
3. Israel would be without a king for a long period of time.
Israel has been without a king for nearly two thousand years,
though a Davidic royal dynasty was an important part of the Old
Testament revelation.
4. Israel would lack government officials for a long time. Now,
after almost 1,850 years, the Jews have them again.
5. Israel would lack sacrifice and ephod, both associated with
God's commands at Mt. Sinai. This has been true for nearly two
thousand years and is quite surprising in view of how important
sacrifice and the priesthood were in the Old Testament.
6. Israel would lack pillar and idols. This seems obvious today,
because the Jews so adamantly worship one God, but the situation
was rather different when Hosea made the prediction about 800 B.C.
7. Israel would return to its land as a single united nation. A
century ago, such an event would have seemed almost impossible.
Palestine was controlled by a Muslim government which had no
interest in providing a homeland, much less an independent state,
for the Jews. Yet it has come to pass!
8. The countries explicitly named in Isaiah 11 have been nearly
emptied of Jews in this return to Palestine.
9. The Jews have fought successfully with the surrounding nations
in establishing and maintaining the new state of Israel.
Sadly, some elements of the Christian church have ignored or
participated in the persecution of God's special covenantal people,
the Jews. Yet Romans 9-11 exhorts Christians never to rejoice in
the misfortunes of the Jews. To do so brings shame to the church
and to our Lord.
As we look at God's hand in the history of Israel it may seem
fierce to us, for at least two reasons: first, we regularly ignore
the biblical teaching that there is a life beyond this one, and
that in the last judgment with its rewards and punishments
everything will be made right, and no one will get less than he or
she deserves; and second we regularly minimize our own sin, blaming
our actions on circumstances and environment. Whatever may be the
faults of our parents, teachers, or society, God will apportion to
them (and us!) exactly what we deserve--unless we accept the offer
of God's forgiveness through believing on Christ as our personal
Savior.
Are all the predictions we have listed trivial? Did they just
happen by chance? Or is the God of the Bible indeed the One who
controls history and who announces the end from the beginning? The
decision is yours.
© 1994 Probe Ministries
About the Author
Rich Milne is a former research associate with Probe Ministries.
He has a B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley, and a Th.M.
from Dallas Theological Seminary. Rich works in the area of the
philosophy and history of science, focusing in particular on the
origin of the universe and the origin of life, and the history and
philosophy of art. He and his wife, Becky, are currently on staff with
East-West Ministries in Dallas, Texas. He can be reached via e-mail at
rmilne@eastwestministries.org.
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Updated: 14 July 2002
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