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Israel’s 25th Knesset Makes History with its Biblical Heartland Vote

By Arlene Bridges Samuels

On July 23, Israel’s Parliament (Knesset) passed a momentous resolution: a symbolic vote to advance the nation’s sovereignty over Judea, Samaria, and the Jordan Valley. This historic decision could well have a lasting impact—and reshape the Middle East. With the Knesset currently composed of 26 political parties, it is close to miraculous that a majority—71 of the 120 Knesset members—voted in favor of the non-binding resolution. It is unusual that the Knesset agreed in a majority bipartisan vote.

Dan Illouz, a member of Prime Minister Netanyahu’s Likud party, represented one of four Knesset parties that submitted the resolution for Israel’s sovereignty in Judea, Samaria, and the Jordan Valley. Illouz declared, “For the first time ever, the Knesset is expressing official support for the application of Israeli sovereignty in Judea and Samaria.” He added that their message was clear: “Judea and Samaria are not a bargaining chip—they are the heart of our country.”

Israel’s 25th Knesset also made history in another profound way. Today, Israel’s citizenry is 80 percent secular—yet in the recent resolution, politicians framed the new resolution in Scriptural terms that emphasized and recognized Israel’s biblical roots. As the resolution declares: “Centuries and millennia before the establishment of the modern state, the forefathers and prophets of the nation lived and acted in these regions. Here, the foundations of Jewish faith and culture were laid. Cities like Hebron, Shechem (Nablus), Shiloh and Beit El are not merely historical sites—they are living expressions of the continuous Jewish presence in the land.”

Sovereignty discussions are not new. The dedicated Israel Defense Forces have fought for 21 months in a defensive war where its enemies continue intensifying the threat to Israel’s security. The unspeakable murders and kidnapping of hostages on October 7, 2023—not to mention refusing to free all living hostages and bodies of the deceased (still true at this writing)—fueled an earlier vote on February 21, 2024. At that time, the Knesset voted 99–11 to support Israel’s Cabinet and to reject “international diktats regarding a permanent settlement with the Palestinians.” In plain terms, another big vote: No Palestinian statehood in Israel.

For decades, Israel has extended overtures for peace with Palestinians in the biblical heartland—moves that proved futile. Each attempt resulted in opposition. Certainly now, in the face of Hamas’s brutal invasions and massacres, those days are over. Twenty years of proof bolsters Israel’s overwhelming opposition to what I call another Palestinian state. Why?

In 2005, Israel literally gave a state to Palestinians living in Gaza when it ordered its 8,000 Jewish citizens to relocate to another part of Israel from their homes and businesses. Termed the “Disengagement,” this move was Arial Sharon’s concept as prime minister (2001-2006). By withdrawing, Sharon hoped to accomplish a meaningful step toward peace. The deadline for voluntary compliance was August 15, after which date Israel’s military forcibly evicted its own Jewish citizens—an agonizing, heartbreaking period of some weeks. Yet when the IDF finally locked the gate at the Kissufim crossing between Israel and Gaza—its Jewish families no longer there—Palestinians began destroying every good opportunity the Jewish community left behind, including homes and thriving greenhouse businesses. Destructiveness and chaos are among the reasons that other Arab nations are hesitant to relocate Palestinian Gazans into their countries.

Twenty years later, Gaza is undeniably a disaster. Rather than aiming at developing a gorgeous, productive Palestinian state, when Palestinians elected Hamas in 2007, their new Islamic patron—Iran—Instead twisted a rare opportunity into a death trap, complete with a vast network of underground of tunnels. Hamas has been using women and children as human shields, filled minds with demonic hatred, and attacked Israelis with rockets, fires, and murders. Then the atrocities of October 7 happened. Yet, despite Palestinian abuse of Israel’s generous gift for a Palestinian state in 2005, condemnation is globally and unsurprisingly adding up against Knesset’s sovereignty resolution. Thankfully, our U.S. Congress has introduced the “Recognizing Judea and Samaria Act” in both the House (H.R. 902) and Senate (S. 384)—using the genuine historic name in official U.S. materials and eliminating the term “West Bank.”

The Knesset’s resolution is not yet legally binding, but it opens a door to enact Israeli law for its rightful sovereignty in Judea and Samaria. The resolution does not call for an annexation. Annexation takes place when one country unilaterally, through force or by treaty, takes over another country’s territory—considered a violation of international law. In the 1967 Six-Day War, Israel liberated Judea and Samaria, which Jordan had occupied in an Arab war against Israel. Jordan had no interest to improve the land it seized and occupied for almost 20 years. As Jews began to move there again, with hearts and hands of love they made it beautiful and productive—and it now has upwards of 500,000 Jewish citizens.

Mainstream media and the uninformed often describe these citizens as “settlers” and call the region the West Bank—which is simply a geographical term meaning “west of the Jordan River.” I have visited many Israeli “settlements.” They are towns of varying sizes with businesses, schools, medical facilities, grocery stores, and synagogues. The most sacred marker of Israel’s ancestry is Shiloh, where the Tabernacle stood for 369 years housing the holy, treasured Ark of the Covenant. Shiloh was Israel’s first capital.

Some background for Knesset’s rightful resolution: More than 100 years ago, international law began codifying Israel as the national home of the Jewish people. That began the San Remo Conference in 1920 and the Balfour Declaration in 1922. On May 14, 1948, when the governing British Mandate ended, Israel declared its modern statehood based on previous international legal decisions. Yet those decisions are ignored now more than ever in the United Nations, where Arabs have rejected any previous plans or solutions attempted by the U.N.

These secular decisions, while not biblically based in international law, are outlined repeatedly in the Old and New Testaments by the God of Heaven’s Armies, the Premier Authority. In Amos 9:15 God declared HIS sovereignty: “I will plant Israel in their own land, never again to be uprooted from the land I have given them.”

The Evangelical Christian community embraces all of Israel as our spiritual homeland, including Judea, Samaria, and the Jordan Valley where Jesus walked. In 1948, the decades of seeds planted with hope ripened into the rebirth of Israel and its Declaration of Independence. Reading the text of that Declaration from the simple podium at Tel Aviv Museum, David Ben Gurion—Israel’s first prime minister—also announced the new nation’s official name, “Israel.” Reestablished as a modern country after two millennia, Israel survives—in promises kept by the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

Let us agree with Israel Ganz, chair of the Yesha Council, the umbrella organization of all the local authorities in Judea, Samaria, and the Jordan Valley. “It is clear and undeniable evidence of the national will to realize our values and our right to our land,” he said.  “This vote is a significant milestone on the path toward advancing the strategic step that will fortify the security of the entire State of Israel.” Ganz then called on the government of Israel: “Turn this decision into reality on the ground.”

Our CBN Israel team invites you to pray with us this week and to be part of sharing this history-making Resolution for our spiritual homeland.

Prayer Points:

  • Pray for the Knesset to quickly enact the sovereignty resolution into law.
  • Pray with praise for the strong biblical references in the resolution.
  • Pray that as the resolution advances, unity will grow even stronger.
  • Pray for additional strength for the IDF to quell possible Palestinian protests in the heartland.

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.

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