After Blood Moon Russia, and WOW now China, and Egypt are part of an ALLIANCE in Israel's backyard! Is this the Ezekiel 38 Gog and Magog prophecy coming alive?
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrives in Moscow. (Photo by the
Israeli Embassy in Russia)
Israeli Embassy in Russia)
Russia and China Move into Middle East
"You stretch out your right hand, and the earth swallows your
enemies. In your unfailing love you will lead the people you have
redeemed.” (Exodus 15:12–13)
Last week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu took a "lightning-quick" trip to Russia to discuss with
Russian President Vladimir Putin the "increasingly complicated
situation" to Israel's north. Netanyahu said he wanted to
avoid "misunderstandings" between Russia and Israel, while describing
to Putin the cooperation of the Syrian army with
Iran and Hezbollah in building a terror network against Israel from the north.
Iran and Syria have been arming Hezbollah, an Iranian proxy, "over the
last number of years and even more-so over the last few months," Netanyahu
told Putin, showing him intelligence that Syria has tried to smuggle Russian
artillery to Hezbollah. Iran, as well, is working to "build a second
terrorist front against us from the Golan Heights" using the Syrian army,
Netanyahu said. "Our policy is to
prevent these weapons transfers, and to prevent the formation of a terror front
and attacks against us from the territory of the Golan. In these
circumstances, I thought it was very important that I come here, both to
clarify our policy and to make sure there are no misunderstandings between our
forces," Netanyahu said. "Israel and Russia have a shared
interest to ensure stability in the Middle East."
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (left) shakes hands with
Russian
President Vladimir Putin at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence outside
Moscow, Russia on September 21.
President Vladimir Putin at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence outside
Moscow, Russia on September 21.
The meeting was reportedly cordial, with Putin
promising that "all of Russia's actions in the region will always be very responsible."
He also condemned attacks against Israel. "We are aware of the
shelling against Israel and we condemn all such shelling. I know that
these shellings are carried out by internal elements,” Putin told Netanyahu.
“I understand your concern and I am very pleased that you have come here to
discuss all issues in detail," Putin said. "We never forget
that a great many expats from the Soviet Union live in the State of Israel, and
that has a special impact on relations between the countries." While Putin has backed Syria's President
Bashar al-Assad throughout Syria's brutal war, which began in March 2011,
United States Secretary of State John Kerry has
told Russia that its "continued support for Assad risks escalating the
conflict and undermining our shared goal of fighting extremism."
Syria faces the threat of the Islamic State in addition to continued
devastation from the war between Assad's regime and the rebel factions, which
has had a staggering cost of about 310,000 lives.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (left) talks with Russian
President Vladimir Putin at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence outside
Moscow, Russia, September 21. Netanyahu sought to ensure Israel’s
ability to fight terror emanating from Syria, despite Moscow’s military
presence there.
President Vladimir Putin at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence outside
Moscow, Russia, September 21. Netanyahu sought to ensure Israel’s
ability to fight terror emanating from Syria, despite Moscow’s military
presence there.
With its presence in Syria, Putin told Netanyahu
that Russia's "main goal is to defend the Syrian state." According to satellite imaging, Syria has
received a Russian investment of tanks, troops and at least 28 combat planes
that surreptitiously reached western Syria and landed at the al-Assad airfield
in the past few weeks. The United States, France, Britain and others have shown
concern at Russia's "very significant" build-up in Syria. French
Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said that “everyone can see the very
significant build-up of Russian forces both in the port of Tartus and above
all, with the setting-up of a military airport to the south of Latakia and the
presence of several fighter jets, combat helicopters and drone capacity
there." He called on Moscow to justify its actions in Syria. The
United States also noted four Russian military helicopters touched down in
Syria last Wednesday, with Secretary of State John Kerry stating that he is not
taking Russia's claims to be intervening against the Islamic State "at
face value." "We look at the type of
airplanes or the types of munitions and so forth, and it obviously raises much
more serious questions about what is happening," Kerry told CNN
on September 16, three days after satellite images showed the preparation of
two additional military bases in Syria "for the arrival of a significant
number of Russian ground troops."
A map showing Syria, Lebanon, Israel, and Jordan
The BBC
also reported anti-aircraft systems, drones and 200 Russian marines already in
Syria.
The joint
mechanism discussed by the heads of state and confirmed Thursday by an
anonymous senior Israeli official will bring the deputy chiefs of both Israel's
and Russia's militaries together, starting next week, to talk over the
countries' movements. Stray rockets and bullets from Syria into northern Israel
have kept the Jewish state on alert as Syria's 4.5-year civil war continues. According
to a September 21 Al Arabiya report, Israel has agreed to provide Putin
"high-quality intelligence" about movements in Syria if Russia will
"rein in" Iran and Hezbollah and agree not to interfere when Israel
defends itself against attacks. Of course, this move into Syria provokes
images of the Gog and Magog war described in Ezekiel 38–39, along with Iran's
growing coalition in the region. "When my
people Israel are living in safety, will you not take notice of it? You will
come from your place in the far north, you and many nations with you, ...
I will bring you against my land, so that the nations may know me when I
am proved holy through you before their eyes.'" (Ezekiel
38:14–16)
Syrian children amidst the rubble of war
Iran Itches for Israel to Strike First
"A man with an impure spirit came from the tombs to meet him. …
Night and day among the tombs and in the hills he would cry out and cut himself
with stones." (Mark 5:2, 5)
Israel’s
enemies and peace partners alike increased their slanderous claims last month
that Israel has incited violence and terrorism against the Palestinians on the
Temple Mount. These claims are moving regional leaders in Iran and
elsewhere to make aggressive threats. The Iranian army's commander-in-chief
Maj. Gen. Ataollah Salehi voiced hope last week for a preliminary strike from
Israel on Iran — an act that would give the Islamic Republic an excuse to
finally destroy Israel while casting full culpability onto the Jewish state. "We
will certainly destroy Israel," Salehi said, last Tuesday, at a Tehran
parade that began Iran's Defense Week and commemorated the start of the
1980–1988 Iran-Iraq War. During his September 11 speech, Iranian supreme leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Israel would not survive another quarter century.
Last Tuesday, Salehi underlined this hope. "We long for Israel to
take action against us as soon as possible so we will be able to destroy it
before 25 years are up," Salehi said.
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
Meanwhile, last Wednesday while speaking to Hajj pilgrims
(Muslims who travel to Mecca), Iran's supreme leader condemned Israel for the
"ultimate degree of ruthlessness and evil" in "crimes"
toward the Palestinian Arabs. Khamenei also said that Israel's police
authority over the Temple Mount in Jerusalem is an "insult" to the
al-Aqsa Mosque. "The Zionist regime's crimes in Palestine and repeated
insult of the sacred sanctuary of Al-Aqsa Mosque ... are the foremost problem
for Muslims," Khamenei said. Khamenei's comments to the Muslim pilgrims
came one day before a stampede killed at least 700 people in a tent city near
Mecca during the Hajj's final "stoning the devil" ritual. This
event mimics the Abraham of Muslim folklore who supposedly rejected the
temptations of the devil by stoning him. In sobering irony, Khamenei accused
Israel last Wednesday of "trampling the lives and properties of the
oppressed Palestinians." Meanwhile, Israeli
Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon eased the way for Palestinian Arabs living in
the eastern territories of Judea and Samaria to visit the Temple Mount plaza
for the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, "the Festival of the
Sacrifice," on Thursday. The allowances permitted Muslim men 45
years or older and Muslim women 30 years or older to visit the Temple Mount
complex on Thursday, despite continued ethnic-religious tensions in Jerusalem,
including rock attacks during the Jewish high holy day of Yom Kippur.
Muslim visits to the Temple Mount are quite different than Jewish
visits.
Muslim visitors enjoy unchallenged study groups and times of peace
and quiet.
Muslim visitors enjoy unchallenged study groups and times of peace
and quiet.
Of course, Iran is not alone in its incitement. Last
Tuesday, Palestinian Authority (PA) leader Mahmoud Abbas claimed to a Parisian
audience that an intifada by the Arab Palestinians is a possibility if
violence on the Temple Mount continued "and peace talks with Israel did
not resume." "What is happening is extremely dangerous, and we do
not wish for this situation to continue so that it does not result in chaos and
in an intifada [uprising] which we do not want," Abbas told his audience,
while standing beside French President Francois Hollande. Abbas has a history
of claiming that Israel refuses to participate in peace negotiations, leading
to talk of sanctions against Israel by world leaders—while the PA has
repeatedly rejected sitting down at the table and ignored valid peace deals. As
recently as September 1, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu said he was "prepared to go to Ramallah or anywhere
else right now to meet and hold direct negotiations without
preconditions." Netanyahu
asked PA representatives at the time to convey to Abbas "that I am willing
to meet with him and [to ask] if he is willing." Netanyahu has
called faithfully for conflict resolution, which he believes to be "two
states for two peoples—a demilitarized Palestinian states that recognizes the
nation-state of the Jewish people." The prime minister also rebuked the
Palestinian Authority leadership this past week for lying about Israeli actions
and security policies on the Temple Mount, and called the PA to "stop its
wild incitement."
Happy Muslim visitors to the Temple Mount
At the same time, world leaders have rebuked
Israel for maintaining security and defusing Muslim rioters that have plagued
the Mount over high holy days. Israel's activities include the September
13 seizure of pipe bombs, firecrackers and rocks piled upon prayer rugs that
awaited Jewish pilgrims visiting the holy site for the Days of Awe observance
between Rosh HaShanah and Yom Kippur. For these actions, nations such as
Jordan who administers the site has accused Israel of violating the status quo—the
agreement that the Muslim Waqf has administrative control over access to the
mosques and over the Muslims who are able to pray on the mount. In turn,
Israel has security control, and Jews can visit the mount but not enter the
mosques or pray anywhere on the platform. "We are preserving the status
quo. We are not violating it and all comments that we intend to harm
Muslim holy sites are completely baseless," Netanyahu said, pointing out
that Muslims bringing bombs into the al-Aqsa
Mosque to harm Jewish or Israeli visitors are the ones who are altering the
status quo. This fact has not stopped fingers of accusation from
being pointed at Israel. King Abdullah II of Jordan said in Amman earlier
this month that he was "very concerned and angered with the recent escalations
in Jerusalem, specifically in al-Aqsa Mosque." The king reportedly
has rejected meetings with Netanyahu to avoid a "business as usual"
dynamic while the Temple Mount situation remains tense, stating that the
tensions "will affect the relationship between Jordan and Israel, and
Jordan will have no choice but to take action."
Jewish visitors to the Temple Mount must be guarded by Temple Mount
security because Muslim visitors to the Mount resent their presence.
security because Muslim visitors to the Mount resent their presence.
10-Year-Old Finds King David Era Seal in Jerusalem
"Place me like a seal over your heart, like a seal on your arm
…" (Song of Songs 8:6)
A 10-year-old boy, Matvei Tcepliaev, who is
visiting Israel from Russia, volunteered to sift through discarded soil from
the Temple Mount and found a rare 3,000-year-old seal from the time of King
David. It is the first of its kind to be discovered in Jerusalem. The
Temple Mount Sifting Project invites volunteers of all ages who are at least
three feet tall to the Tzurim Valley National Park on the western slope of
Mount Scopus where around 10,000 tons, 400 truckloads, of excavated soil from
construction projects on the Temple Mount were discarded. Much of this soil was
taken from the entrance to King Herod’s construction known today as Solomon’s
Stables, which lies 12.5 meters under the southeast Temple Mount courtyard. After
the unauthorized excavations from 1996–1999, the stables were officially
converted to the El-Marwani Mosque, a 500 square-meter underground Muslim
prayer hall that can hold 10,000+ worshipers.
Volunteers sift through debris irresponsibly excavated from the Temple
Mount. (Photo by Zachi Dvira)
Mount. (Photo by Zachi Dvira)
From its inception, the Temple Mount Sifting
Project has operated under Bar Ilan University, initiated and co-founded by
former student Zachi (Zweig) Dvira, with the help of the City of David
Foundation. Since this educational tourism site began in 2004, over 150,000
volunteers have taken part in the project's wet-sifting phase—spreading mud
from the Mount over a screen and hosing it away to extract interned objects. Finds
from the sifting project take time to be deciphered and dated, so usually
international volunteers are not present to learn the significance of their
finds. Tcepliaev's cone-shaped seal, archaeologists have revealed, dates to the
10th century BC during the reigns of Kings David and Solomon. It
"testifies to the administrative activity which took place upon the Temple
Mount during those times." "What makes this discovery particularly
significant is that it originated from upon the Temple Mount itself, " Dr.
Gabriel Barkay, the cofounder and a director of the Temple Mount Sifting Project,
stated in a press release. "The dating of the seal corresponds to the
historical period of the Jebusites and the conquest of Jerusalem by King David,
as well as the construction of the Temple and the royal official compound by
his son, King Solomon," Barkay elaborated. “All the parallel seals
with similar stylistic designs have been found at sites in Israel, among them
Tel Beit Shemesh, Tel Gezer and Tel Rehov, and were dated to the 11th–10th
centuries BCE."
Volunteers for the Temple Mount Sifting project search
for coins, pottery, and other finds as they clean debris
excavated from the Mount during the building of the
El Marwani Mosque in Solomon's Stables.
for coins, pottery, and other finds as they clean debris
excavated from the Mount during the building of the
El Marwani Mosque in Solomon's Stables.
Barkay described the seal as pierced through so
that it could be hung from a string or chain, and said, "upon the base of
the seal appear the images of two animals, one on top of the other, perhaps
representing a predator and its prey." As expected, recovering history
through tons of displaced soil has proven challenging. Without
archaeological supervision, the Waqf likely damaged or discarded significant
evidence of Israel's rich Temple history; for certain, the haphazard removal
especially from 1996–1999 broke up the holy site's earth strata, which are used
for period dating. “In recent years, using newly developed statistical
methodologies and technologies we have managed to overcome the challenge of
having finds with no exact context since they were not recovered in a proper
archaeological excavation," said Dvira. Project leaders of the sifting
project call volunteers to look for pottery, glass shards, metals, bones,
mosaic stones and worked stones, as well as rarer coins, seals or jewelry,
which are then registered by staff members.
Muslim worshipers in El Marwani Mosque.
"The Temple Mount Sifting Project has focused
its efforts on the enormous tasks of processing and studying the finds and
preparing them for scientific publication. Presently, more than half a
million finds are still waiting to be processed and analyzed in our laboratory,"
Dvira said. "Since the Temple Mount has never been excavated, the
ancient artifacts retrieved in the Sifting Project provide valuable and
previously inaccessible information. The many categories of finds are
among the largest and most varied ever found in Jerusalem." Ruth, a
January 2010 volunteer with the sifting project shared the emotion of the
experience. "When the guide handed me my certificate, I read the words, 'Thou wilt arise, and have compassion upon Zion; for it
is time to be gracious unto her, for the appointed time is come: For Thy
servants take pleasure in her stones, and love her dust (Psalms
102:14–15)' and saw that the dust was still on my fingers. I
just cried!" Ruth writes in her experience review. Another 2010 volunteer,
Lindsay Ingalls, stated she found pottery, mosaics, Roman glass, a coin, an
ancient nail and bones from the Temple sacrifices. "The soil was
gray—filled with ashes from the sacrifices," Ingalls writes.
The entrance to El Marwani Mosque on the Temple Mount.
Israel Tax Authority Will Pay to Repair Torched
Church of the Multiplication
"Give to everyone what you owe them: If you owe taxes, pay taxes;
if revenue, then revenue; if respect, then respect; if honor, then honor."
(Romans 13:7)
Israel's Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein has
ruled that repairs to the Galilee's Church of the Multiplication will be
covered by the Israeli Tax Authority following a June arson attack by two
Jewish extremists.The Roman Catholic church is built next to the Sea
of Galilee in Tabgha at a site thought to be where Yeshua (Jesus) multiplied a
basket of loaves and fish for thousands to eat. On June 18, 2015, Yinon
Reuveni, 20, and Yehuda Asraf, 19, set fire to the Church of the Multiplication
of the Loaves and Fishes. The fire gutted large
sections of the building, covering the stone walls in ash and littering the
floors with a mess of charred Bibles. The fire also destroyed
large sections of the roof, blackening overhead beams. Sunlight pouring
in through the roof only highlights the devastation. The arsonists tagged a
wall of the church with the words, "Idol worship will be destroyed."
The Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fishes in Tabgha, on
the shore of the Sea of Galilee, suffered serious damage after arsonists
set the building ablaze.
the shore of the Sea of Galilee, suffered serious damage after arsonists
set the building ablaze.
Even though a group of Orthodox rabbis raised
$17,000 to help fund repairs to its Friendship Center, the total cost of
repairing the church is reported to be $1.7 million. Israeli
law requires the Tax Authority's Property Tax Fund to cover damages and to
compensate victims of hate crimes, war or terrorism linked to the Israel-Arab
conflict or to ethnic-national differences, according to The Jerusalem Post.
Even so, in early September, the Tax Authority argued against responsibility
for funding the repairs, claiming the act by right-wing arsonists Reuveni and
Asraf had been religiously motivated. Weinstein,
after studying Reuveni and Asraf's July indictment, gave his opinion on
September 21 that the attack was ideological and fell under the wider
Arab-Israeli conflict. Before their indictment, Asraf had been
living in an illegal outpost in Judea-Samaria, while Reuveni had been expelled
and blocked from the eastern territories several times. Reuveni also was
suspected of Jerusalem's Dormition Abbey arson in February 2015. Both
arsonists reportedly hold the view that any non-Jewish worship in Israel, and
that the state of Israel itself, are obstacles to the rebuilding of the Temple.
(TOI)
Nuns pray in the Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fishes,
which is located in Tabgha on the shore of the Sea of Galilee. Under the
altar is a block of limestone believed to be the stone on which the miraculous
meal was laid.
which is located in Tabgha on the shore of the Sea of Galilee. Under the
altar is a block of limestone believed to be the stone on which the miraculous
meal was laid.
Jerusalem Police Salaries Raised Due to Risk
"He is the God who avenges me, who puts the nations under me, who
sets me free from my enemies. You exalted me above my foes; from a
violent man you rescued me." (2 Samuel 22:48-49)
On Friday, the Israeli Cabinet increased the
monthly salary of Jerusalem police officers by 800 NIS (about $200) after a new
wave of terror attacks and violence began on Rosh HaShanah (Jewish New Year). Because
of heightened dangers to security forces in Jerusalem, the city has been unable
to fill 340 of its 450 positions, with police recruits refusing jobs in the
capital over quieter towns around the country for the same wage. More
than 30 Israeli police officers have been hurt since the Jewish New Year began
on September 13.
Two Israeli police officers guard the streets of the Old City of
Jerusalem
on the Via Dolorosa, where Yeshua (Jesus) carried the Roman execution stake.
on the Via Dolorosa, where Yeshua (Jesus) carried the Roman execution stake.
The
Finance Ministry added that the increase in pay for Jerusalem police work also
amounted to a "thank you" from the Israeli government for filling the
city's security needs. Earlier this month, the Israeli police redirected an
additional 800 police officers to the capital to defuse the Muslim day of rage
that was expected after Friday prayers on September 18. Meanwhile, PLO
Secretary-General Saeb Erekat slammed Israel's security cabinet for relaxing
the country's open-fire policy, which now permits security forces to shoot if a
third party's life is threatened.
A mounted policewoman carries a puppy in
Independence Park, Jerusalem.
(Photo by Adam Jones)
Independence Park, Jerusalem.
(Photo by Adam Jones)
"The Israeli government continues to incite
against Palestinian lives, with a culture of hate that dehumanizes a whole
nation," Erekat said on Saturday about the change, calling the ruling a
"mere pretext to justify the escalating Israeli crimes against the people
of Palestine." Erekat stated to Palestinian Authority news agency WAFA that "Israel
continues to ignore and gravely break its obligations under 'international
law,'"—an empty but nevertheless influential catchphrase used in
anti-Israel propaganda.
Dear
reader, your prayer support is essential to reach the Jewish People with the message of Forgiveness
of Sin through Yeshua HaMashiach (Jesus the Messiah) during this end-times
Sukkot season.
No comments:
Post a Comment