What Role Does Israel Play in the End Times?
May 18, 2002
Israel is the only nation founded by a sovereign act of God. God said to Abraham, Get out of your country...From your family...And from your fathers house...To a land that I will show you...To your descendants I will give this land (Genesis 12:1, 7).
There are two controversies concerning Israel. The first is whether the promise to Abraham was a promise of literal land or a promise of heaven. The second controversy asks whether the promise to Abraham and his seed for a literal land is conditional based upon Israels obedience to God or an unconditional promise.
Lets examine Scripture to verify beyond any doubt that God intended for Abraham and the Jewish people to have a literal land upon which they would live.
God Promised a Land
In Genesis 13, God told Abraham, Lift your eyes now and look from the place where you are...for all the land which you see I give to you and your descendants forever (Genesis 13:14, 15).
Genesis 15:18 states, On the same day the Lord made a covenant with Abram, saying: To your descendants I have given this land, from the river of Egypt to the great river, the River Euphrates. This is a very literal land. Heaven is not described, even allegorically, as the area between the river of Egypt and the Euphrates.
God told Abraham, Know certainly that your descendants will be strangers in a land that is not theirs, and will serve them, and they will afflict them four hundred years. And also the nation whom they serve I will judge; afterward they shall come out with great possessions (Genesis 15:13, 14). Israels departure from the Promised Land was literal because they went into a literal Egypt. After four hundred years they became a nation of two to three million people and they physically left a literal Egypt for a literal Promised Land not heaven.
The title deed to the Promised Land was passed from Abraham to Isaac. God said to Isaac, Sojourn in this land and I will be with you and bless you; for to you and your descendants I give, all these lands, and I will perform the oath which I swore to Abraham your father (Genesis 26:3).
The title deed to the Promised Land was then passed to Jacob from Isaac. In Genesis 28:13, God said, I am the Lord God of Abraham your father and the God of Isaac; the land on which you lie I will give to you and your descendants. You have to be in a very literal land to lie on it.
God Promised Unconditionally
Was Gods promise to Abraham of a Promised Land conditional or unconditional? Those who believe Gods promise was conditional simply do not understand the blood covenant.
In the Old Testament there were three ways by which covenants could be made: a shoe covenant, a salt covenant, and a blood covenant.
In the blood covenant, the contracting parties would agree on the terms of the covenant. Then they would take an animal, kill it, split the carcass in half down the backbone, and place the divided parts opposite each other on the ground forming a pathway between then pieces.
The two would join hands, recite the contents of the covenant, and walk between the divided halves of the slain animal. The blood covenant meant they were bound until death, and if either broke the terms of the covenant, his blood should be spilled as the blood of the slain animal. A blood covenant was a permanent and unconditional covenant.
In Genesis 15, God commanded Abraham to take a heifer, a she-goat, a ram, a turtledove, and a pigeon; and all were split in half except the birds. God placed Abraham in a deep sleep, for no man can look upon God and live, as He prepared to enter a blood covenant with Abraham.
In his sleep, Abraham saw a smoking oven and a burning torch passed between those pieces (Genesis 15:17). In the Old Testament the burning lamp signified the presence of the Shekinah glory of God. God was binding Himself, unconditionally, by a blood covenant to Abraham and his descendants forever, saying , To your descendants I have given this land (Genesis 15:18).
Confirmation that the promise to Abraham and to his seed was unconditional is presented in Psalm 38:30-37. God says, If his sons [Israel] forsake My law...And do not walk in My judgments. If they break My statutes...And do not keep My commandments, Then I will visit their transgression with the rod. And their iniquity with stripes. Nevertheless My lovingkindness I will not utterly take from him, Nor allow My faithfulness to fail. My covenant I will not break.
Gods Promise Fulfilled
What about the future of Israel? Israel was reborn as a nation in one day on May 15, 1948, when the United Nations recognized the state of Israel. This was a fulfillment of Isaiah 66:8.
Amos writes concerning the restoration of Israel, I will bring back the captives of My people Israel; They shall build the waste cities and inhabit them; They shall plant vineyards and drink wine from them; They shall also make gardens and eat fruit from them. I will plant them in their land. And no longer shall they be pulled up...From the land I have given them, says the Lord your God Amos 9:14.
The prophets of Israel declared the nation of Israel would be reborn, would be rebuilt and the Jewish people would never again be removed. When Messiah comes, He will set up His throne in the city of Jerusalem and of His kingdom there shall be no end.
John Hagee, General Editor, Prophecy Study Bible
New King James Version
http://www.watch.org/showart.php3?idx=28484&rtn=/articles.html&showsubj=1&mcat=1