10 Jan 2022

Plague of Fear
A rule-of-thumb I’ve always tried to follow about Israel is that those that live there know more about their situation than we do. Sure, we can speculate about policy and things like that, but we should probably reserve judgement unless some other facts come to light.
I don’t feel that way about the way the Coronavirus situation has been handled by Israel.
This week I spoke to a friend that lives there; she works in the government and said that vaccine mandates are in place. I know they are in place in other countries as well. Our own beloved U.S. is now “plagued” by those wanting to force mandates.
This little nugget though has stuck with me. My point is this: I’ve been surprised at how Israel has handled this whole (manufactured?) crisis. I always rely on Israel to be the leader in most everything. The smarts, collectively, of that country is off-the-charts.
While it is true that at long last, Israel is relaxing some of the draconian restrictions (no travel from certain countries, a tourism standstill, and quarantine rules upon entering the country), the one overall big thing remains: proof of vaccination.
Look, we can all agree to disagree on whether we want to take the vaccine or not. I have multiple reasons for being skeptical of it—chiefly, our government lies to us routinely—but people should be able to make up their own minds.
That is no longer allowed. See Australia for the latest horror movie along those lines. Totalitarian controls are creeping up everywhere.
The Left wants to enact certain freedom-killing laws. Again, I am shocked that Israel would require proof of vaccination for certain segments of the population.
There are 116,500 government employees in Jerusalem alone. Now, there have been almost 1.5 million cases of the virus in Israel to date, with 8,259 deaths.
Now, even a single death is tragic, we know that. However, there are 9.2 million people in Israel. These numbers—I mean, factoring in the overall worldwide stats—line up with the undisputed fact that you have a 99.5 percent chance of surviving Coronavirus. I don’t get the severe lockdown edicts.
Unless the Left is pushing the narrative, controlling the flow of information. Admittedly, the restrictions in Israel began under the government of Netanyahu. So, Israel just announced:
“Earlier in the week, the ministry announced that starting from Sunday, foreign nationals from non-red countries will also be able to enter Israel without the need for special permission for the first time since the end of November, provided that they are fully vaccinated under the Health Ministry’s criteria: inoculated twice within the previous six months, vaccinated with a booster, recovered with one shot, or recovered within six months, as demonstrated by an electronic recovery certificate.”
Does any of this sound scary to you? It does to me. Electronic recovery certificates? Methinks the virus is a pretext for imposing control over whole populations. Just today at the Supreme Court, Justice Sonia Sotomayor spewed numbers made up out of whole cloth: 100,000 children in serious condition, many on ventilators. But according to the CDC, seven-day hospitalizations among pediatric patients; 3,700.
Why the lies? And why is Israel imposing such strict conditions on the healthy population?
We live in momentous times. As for me, I am content that the Lord has everything in His hands. We should not fear the future.

 

 

3 Jan 2022

Deconstructing the Deconstruction

Decades ago, the scholar A.B. Davidson signaled what he and many of his colleagues thought of the Bible, particularly the Old Testament. Specifically, predictive prophecy:

“The prophet is always a man of his own time and it is always to the people of his own time that he speaks, not to a generation long after, nor to us. And the things of which he speaks will always be things of importance to the people of his own day…”

Davidson wrote that in Hastings Dictionary of the Bible, in 1934! We err if we think the apostasy sweeping across the U.S. is very recent.

Almost a century before Davidson, J.A. Alexander left us with his insights into why such scholars do what they do:

“The successive writers of this modern school, however they may differ as to minor points among themselves, prove their identity or principle by holding that there cannot be distinct prophetic foresight of the distant future…it is really the proton pseudos of the whole school, and the only bond of unity between them.”

Much like Darwin’s friends in London the last half of the 19th century, these scholars simply decided that they personally did not like the idea of a wholly sovereign God. It’s why modern scholars like Greg Boyd push stuff like “Open Theism,” the absurd idea that God doesn’t know all the future. This is all utter blasphemy, and Davidson’s view in particular has brought us to the moment we are in now.

Some people don’t like to hear me muse about all this, but those scholars of yesteryear were the spiritual forefathers of the modern Church Growth Movement, in which true Bible study and Bible reading has been replaced by humanism. We don’t really need to know what Rick Warren or Malcolm Gladwell or Andy Stanley thinks about the world. We need to know the mind of Christ. We can only know Him and the Father through the Word, the written communication God provided to us.

Within that method of communication is the marvelous world of Bible prophecy. I must tell you here that I think our own community shares some of the blame for the lack of serious Bible study, as we’ve said too many times in the last 50 years that Jesus will come back by September. There is also too much emphasis on sensational aspects of prophecy—things that in many cases have nothing to do with the Bible or the Gospel. But people like to be titillated.

There has been a war on Bible prophecy in this country for some time. Israel is at the center of this. If one doesn’t have a proper understanding of Bible prophecy, one does not understand the specialness of the Jews, or their place in history, past and future.

These past false teachers have laid the groundwork for what is going on now. I’ve written in this space before about an article that appeared in Charisma Magazine(!) eight years ago. Titled, “What if Jesus Doesn’t Come Back This Year?” it is written by Margaret Feinberg.

Now, you have to understand, Charisma has been the flagship periodical of the Pentecostal movement for decades. The publisher, Steve Strang, has a reputation for being pro Israel. So then I wonder greatly why Feinberg was allowed to spew her anti-Bible prophecy agenda in its pages.

In the article, she recounts an alleged conversation with a young student who asks her, “Are we living in the endtimes?” Her answer is, in my view, diabolical. She clearly does not care for predictive prophecy, and so she does something insidious, reframing his question to move the conversation in another direction.

She writes then:

“I recognized something about the question. After you interview enough people you discover a simple but profound journalistic truth: If you ask the wrong question, then you’ll get the wrong answer. So I gently prompted the 20-something to reword the question.

“I think you mean, ‘What if we are living in the end times?’

“Without an exit sign in sight, I continued, ‘And that begs the question, What if we’re not?’”

Unbelievable.

What if we’re not.

If one reads the Hebrew Scriptures, then the New Testament, it’s clear that Israel is the centerpiece for the movement of history. Hundreds of specific, detailed prophecies point to the Jewish people returning to their ancient homeland in the last days. Yet commentators like Feinberg want to steer young people away from seeing that.

All this has left our culture in a precarious spot. I would bet that literally millions of people from all walks of life are now asking the original question the young man asked.

They aren’t getting answers.

Which brings me to the point this week, on the first day of 2022.

For some time, I’ve been involved in Christian publishing and media. My area of interest of course is Israel and prophecy. I’d like to ask the RaptureReady audience something I’ve asked from time to time:

Are you or your church interested in these subjects? Do you read and study? Do you want to watch webinars that discuss prophecy, Israel history, the Holocaust, and more? Are you interested in reading and sharing books and other literature?

If you are, would you be kind enough to let me know. I want to hear from a lot of you. Just email me and I’ll let you know what I’m up to, to counter the Scripture-attacking agendas plaguing our country. A shameless plug: my own new book on Bible prophecy, The God That Answers by Fire, will finally be released soon. My injury a few years back derailed a lot of things for me, but I’m back and ready to redeem the time.

Let’s do that together!

Jim1fletcher@yahoo.com