By Arlene Bridges Samuels
A tsunami of accusations against Israel, the Jewish ancestral homeland, is crashing ashore across the globe. Misleading headlines are flooding in, saying Israel is “Accused of the gravest war crimes in Gaza” (the BBC) and charge Israel with ethnic cleansing. Evil is valued and goodness is devalued. The brilliant prophet Isaiah, who today could be awarded the Nobel prize for literature, eloquently described this reversal in Chapter 5, verse 20: Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter. We live in an upside-down world. It is frightening for our Jewish friends in Israel, the United States, and beyond.
Furthermore, strengthening our own faith is indispensable right now. Most evangelicals I know befriend Israel and the Jewish community because we value the entire Bible. Its clarity informs us that our Christian faith was born in the ancient cradle of Judaism. God, in His sovereign plans, created and chose Jews to write 65 books of the Bible—except for Luke, who was considered in ancient traditions to be a Gentile. The Jewish apostle Paul, a murderer-turned-believer in Messiah Jesus (Yeshua) on the Damascus Road, carried the Good News about our Jewish Savior to non-Jews.
Up until the time of Paul’s Damascus Road encounter with Yeshua, the early church for about eight to ten years was populated by Jewish believers, as well as some Gentiles. When the disciples traveled to the known world with the Gospel news after Jesus’ ascension, His Great Commission reached Jews and began seeping into the Gentile community. However, it was the brilliant Apostle Paul, commissioned by God, who would spotlight the Good News to the Gentiles.
The Old and New Testaments were written by Jews, for Jews, and to Jews. Evangelicals do not support the Jewish people in America, Israel, or any other nation because Jews are perfect. They are not perfect; we are not perfect. We are all imperfect. But God has codified His words in a legacy written through the hands and minds of the Jews. The legacy remains today and for eternity with its world-changing redemption story. Guinness World Records documents the Jewish-written Bible as the bestselling nonfiction book of all time. In its research, the non-denominational British and Foreign Bible Society estimates that since the invention of the printing press in the mid-1400s, between 5 and 7 billion copies were printed.
I took a few moments to highlight the Bible as our foundation in our personal lives and in reference to our support for Jews. Because too much of the world is undergoing unwitting disregard for biblical facts about God’s love for His people, the Jews. Daily reading of our guidebook, the Bible, is a spiritual survival habit, lets us learn more about our relationship with the God who made us.
Take a small tour with me to connect with examples globally where anti-Israel and antisemitic sentiments are fomenting. Israeli American Hillel Fuld, a respected Orthodox Jewish Zionist and tech advisor, was scheduled to speak in Australia at fundraising events for Magen David Adom (Israel’s Red Cross). Fuld’s visa was canceled when false accusations labeled him a “merchant of Zionist hate.” Fewer than 120,000 Jewish people live in Australia—out of an estimated 27.5 million. Yet Jew hatred manifested in more than 2,000 anti-Jewish incidents between October 2023 and September 2024—an astonishing number given the small size of its Jewish population.
Moving on to France, their Ministry of National Education reported 1,670 antisemitic acts in schools for the school year 2023–2024. Jewish children, as young as 9 and 10 years old, are badgered at school and do not talk about the Jewish holidays they celebrate at home. Even in the French-speaking part of Switzerland, which views itself as a neutral nation, anti-Jewish social media is rapidly escalating. There were 1,789 incidents in 2024—an increase of 89.5 percent over 2023. Forty-two physical attacks include some schools—all too accurately described as the “new hotbeds of hatred.”
In Germany last November, an under-17 youth soccer team in Berlin from TuS Makkabi, a Jewish sports club, was chased by a crowd from the opposing team wielding sticks and knives. They yelled “Free Palestine” and spat on the Jewish team.
The United States, in the last few weeks, has felt the shock of two Israeli Embassy staff being shot dead by a terrorist, and then reeled from another horrific attack in Boulder, Colorado, when members of a peaceful Jewish group were set on fire. One-third of American Jews report that they have experienced antisemitism, in person or virtually, at least once in the past year. Fifty-six percent mention they have changed their behavior—men choosing not wearing their kippahs and women not wearing their Star of David necklaces. Only 6.3 million Jews live in the U.S.—not even 2 percent of the total population.
This week, the 2025 Israel Summit scheduled for June 9–11 in Dallas, Texas, was canceled due to the threat of violence. Commented former U.S. ambassador to Israel David Friedman: “This is America in 2025. A pro-Israel conference,” he said, “was forced to cancel because of threats from violent jihadists. Law enforcement was completely cooperative, but the threats were of a nature that required cancellation.”
In closing, our short tour now leads to one more terror tunnel discovered below yet another hospital in Gaza—this time, the European Hospital. It offers more proof that Hamas leaders weren’t just hiding underground; they were running their terror network from beneath a hospital. IDF spokesperson Brigadier General Effie Defrin describes the weapons, cash, and ammunition stored in the tunnels under the hospital’s emergency room. Standing in the tunnel, Defrin says, “We found here in this infrastructure a lot of funds, a lot of money, cash used by Hamas—of course, not for the people but for terror activities, weapons.” Here is the link if you wish to watch or share it: [view here].
Given the mindset of those described in Isaiah 5:20 who call “evil good, and good evil,” they would likely refuse to believe facts about this under-the-hospital-terror-post or the massive amount of visual evidence that has been available since October 7, 2023.
Let us be among those who dwell on biblical hope and then commit to honoring God by supporting His chosen people.
Our CBN Israel team invites you to join us in prayer this week recalling Psalm 119:105: “Your word is a lamp for my feet, a light on my path.”
Prayer Points:
- Pray for Jewish communities worldwide to discover shalom to calm their fears.
- Pray for the safety of Jewish schoolchildren living outside of Israel.
- Pray for members of the IDF in their highly dangerous search for hostages in terror tunnels.
- Pray for Israeli families whose adult children in the IDF bravely sacrificed their lives.
Arlene Bridges Samuels is the weekly feature columnist for CBN Israel since 2020. Working on the staff of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) as their SE Regional Outreach Director for nine years, International Christian Embassy Jerusalem USA engaged her as the Leadership Outreach Director part-time for their project American Christian Leaders for Israel. Arlene is an author at The Blogs-Times of Israel, is published at AllIsrael.com and The Jerusalem Connection, and has traveled to Israel since 1990. By invitation, she attends Israel’s Government Press Office Christian Media Summits as part of Christian media worldwide. In 2024, Arlene and her husband Paul co-authored Mental Health Meltdown: Illuminating the Voices of Bipolar and Other Mental Illnesses. www.TheMentalHealthMeltdown.com.
Post a comment