Photo by Yossi Ben David/Courtesy Yad Vashem.
The Children's Memorial at Yad Vashem, Jerusalem, Israel, remembering the young victims of Nazi Germany’s
Holocaust of the Jews.
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We
weren't 12 spies sent in to evaluate the prospects of conquering the Promise
Land. Instead, thousands of years after only two spies, Joshua and Caleb,
brought back a good report—which was rejected by the ancient Children of
Israel—I was among nine Baptist newspaper editors who recently toured Israel
as guests of the Ministry of Tourism.
The
Ministry of Tourism logo depicts two men carrying a large cluster of grapes,
representing the good report of Joshua and Caleb, suggesting Israel today is
like the biblical description of a land flowing with milk and honey, worthy of
the visits of millions of tourists the modern Jewish state hopes will come to
the Holy Land.
My
report is somewhat similar to the two faithful spies—Israel is a good land,
one in which evangelical Christians from around the world are welcomed and
appreciated as tourists. But that positive report is colored by the reality
that evangelical Christians—most of whom are Arab—and Messianic Jews who
live in the land, are sometimes not as welcomed.
Joshua
and Caleb confirmed that there were indeed giants in the land, although they
were confident those inhabitants were no obstacle to God's promises to the
Children of Israel.
My
report is that today's enemies of the tiny state of Israel are found within
Palestine in the form of radical Palestinians intent on annihilating the Jewish
state. Those enemies are also found in neighboring states who share some of
Israel's borders, as well as a few others in very close, strategic proximity
who are no less intent on Israel's destruction.
Into
this extraordinarily complex place I joined eight of my editor colleagues for a
six-day tour of the Holy Land this month. The week was a combination of
spiritual exhilaration at seeing with my own eyes sites of extraordinary
biblical significance and mental exhaustion as I attempted to process in my
feeble mind the importance of these places, sometimes with thousands of years
of history piled on layer upon layer of ruins.
Photo by James A. Smith Sr.
Items from the Holy Land, like Jordan River water, oil, soil and other items, are often bought by tourists as souvenirs.
Yardenit is the location just south of the Sea of Galilee on the Jordan River where some pilgrims are baptized. The likely location
of Jesus’ baptism, however, is much further south at Bethany beyond the Jordan, on the eastern side of the Jordan
River, north of the Dead Sea.
I've
heard it said of others that traveling to the Holy Land was a "life-changing"
experience. I couldn't say that.
For
me, walking (sometimes running, we often joked) where Jesus walked, was instead
a glorious opportunity to see the historical locations I've read about in the
Bible for so many years. I bristle at the idea that the Bible "comes alive"
through such an experience. The Word of God, after all, is alive and powerful
enough to change the lives of millions upon millions throughout the world who
have never come close to setting foot in the Holy Land.
Still,
I now see the Bible differently after having actually seen
• Mt. Carmel
where Elijah won the battle with the prophets of Baal;
• Joppa
where Jonah fled from God's call to preach repentance to Nineveh;
• Nazareth
where Jesus lived most of his life as an obscure carpenter;
• the Sea of
Galilee where Jesus walked on the water, calmed the storm, performed many of
his miracles in nearby villages; and
• Jerusalem
where Abraham was stayed by the angel of the Lord from sacrificing Isaac
because God provided a ram; kings David and Solomon ruled Israel; and Jesus was
received initially jubilantly, but later prayed in sorrow in the Garden of
Gethsemane and was ultimately unjustly tried, convicted, crucified and arose
from the grave for my sins!
On
the other hand, I also saw what bordered on, if not succumbed to, superstition
and idol worship in which pilgrims seemed to make certain "holy" places
themselves the object of veneration, rather than God—Father, Son and Holy
Spirit—Himself whose mighty acts are remembered there.
I
don't hold the terra firma of Israel as sacred, in spite of the plethora of
"holy" water, oil, soil, incense, etc., available for sale at virtually every
pilgrimage site, complete with certificates of authenticity. Such items are
only slightly less offensive than television hucksters who offer prayer cloths
and holy water for a donation.
Photo by James A. Smith Sr.
While
these trinkets are annoying and embarrassing, Israel's Holocaust museum, Yad
Vashem, disturbed my soul in a much different way - in a manner that all of us
should be made to feel now and then.
Located
in Jerusalem, Yad Vashem tells the horrifying story of Nazi Germany's attempt
to exterminate the Jewish race. Any person who questions the reality of evil in
this world need spend only a few minutes at Yad Vashem to understand the
disturbing truth of humanity's endless wickedness. And, don't kid yourself;
such evil persists today.
The
Children's Memorial, commemorating the young lives snuffed out by the Nazis, is
incredibly moving—and a reminder of America's own Holocaust in which unborn
children are being exterminated with too few voices speaking against this
modern-day atrocity.
We
visited the Garden Tomb—a disputed possible location of Jesus' burial site—on the same day as Yad Vashem. As I stood inside the cramped cave some believe
may have—temporarily, praise God!—held Jesus' body, I couldn't help but
reflect on the story of evil told at Yad Vashem earlier that day.
God
has provided His answer to such evil in the person of his son, Jesus Christ. I
was reminded of how wicked I am in the face of God's righteousness—and how
blessed I am that God's grace in Jesus Christ's work on the cross and in His
resurrection covers my sin!
This
brings me back to the fact that many evangelical Christians who rightly affirm
Israel and strongly advocate our government's support of Israel sometimes
forget, or don't know, that we have brothers and sisters in Christ in Israel,
many of whom are Palestinians, who are preaching the Gospel in the very land
where Jesus walked this earth. We don't have to choose between Israel and
evangelical Palestinians.
Visiting
Israel—and particularly the region around the Sea of Galilee and the Golan
Heights bordering Syria on the north—vividly illustrated to me just how
precarious is Israel's security situation in the region. Our government, in my
view, should not be party to any pressuring of Israel to make itself vulnerable
to her avowed enemies who wish to annihilate the Jewish state any less than the
Nazis sought to exterminate the Jewish race.
Neither,
however, should evangelicals in America fail to speak on behalf of the faithful
remnant of evangelicals in the Holy Land and especially Jewish and Muslim
converts to Christ who are sometimes pressured and persecuted by governments—both Israeli and Palestinian—as well as family and society. These brothers
and sisters in Christ offer the only eternal hope Israelis and Palestinians can
ever know and they merit the encouragement and support of American evangelicals
certainly no less than the security needs of the State of Israel.
Having
visited Jordan in 2006, I have been blessed now to see the Holy Land from both
sides of the Jordan River. It is a good land, one I hope to return to at least
once more.
"Peace
is too big a word for the Middle East," an Israeli told us one day, reflecting
the opinion of many of her fellow citizens. Politically, it seems she may be
correct. But spiritually, the peace offered by God can be attained by all—Jews and Gentiles (of all nationalities), alike—who will but confess Jesus
Christ as Lord.