Christians and the Holocaust
What can and should we do to comfort Zion? Christians are spiritually obliged to try and answer this question.
What can and should we do to comfort Zion? Christians are spiritually obliged to try and answer this question.
According to the Biblical calendar, the new moon marks the beginning of each new month. It is called Rosh Chodesh
The date, October 31st remains in the history books as “the last great cavalry, and the finest in history” as 800 heroic men and their courageous horses created a legend by achieving a near impossible military victory.
Going back to where it started! That was the strong feeling of the Indigenous members of ‘Avad Oz’, ICEJ Australia’s worship group. These strong Believers whose home is Australia’s desert, knew the gospel which had brought many of their community out of the darkness of addictions, had come to them from Jerusalem.
The miracle of the Exodus from Egypt was such a nature-defying, irrational, illogical event. But did you know that it’s re-occurring today on biblical proportions?
The term “Zionism” has been turned into a negative word by Israel’s enemies, “Christian Zionism” is also under attack and often misrepresented in the media and in much public discourse.
Israel today is a remarkable country. Yet the land of Israel was not always so fruitful. God promised that one day He would come and find His people, no matter how far they had been scattered, and return them to the land promised to Abraham and his descendants as an “everlasting possession.”
For many decades, Evangelical support for Israel seemed rock solid. Today, however, many younger Christians in Western churches are hesitant to give Israel the same unconditional support that their parents did.
Keep Israel in prayer as a new government is formed. Pray for the Prime Minister – Benjamin Netanyahu according to 1 Kings 3:9
This Wednesday 9th November, ICEJ Australia remembers with sadness the event known as Kristallnacht.
Israel is the only country in the world denied the sovereign right of every nation to designate the city of its choice to serve as its capital and seat of government. How this discriminatory treatment of Israel arose bears careful review.