The Significance of Jerusalem
There
are four questions or issues that will be resolved as we go through this study.
First of all, does the modern state of Israel have a legitimate claim on their
historic homeland today? It may surprise us but not every Jew living in the
land believes that they do. There is a lot of difference of opinion even in the
land of Israel. So the question we will address over the course of this series
relates to this. Some people say that the Abrahamic covenant and the promise of
the land to Israel would only apply when the Messiah, the Lord Jesus Christ,
returns. Is that true? The Palestinian or Arab position is that the Jews have
illegally stolen the land from them. What are the facts?
The
second question we will come to answer over the course of this series is, Is
the existence of the modern state of Israel prophetically significant? What is
meant by that is, does it indicate anything about setting the stage for the
Tribulation period? This is not to mean, Is this a fulfillment of prophecy but
is this significant? Can we attach any significance at all to the fact that the
Jews are back in the land, or could they just be wiped off the map tomorrow and
not come back for another 2000 years?
Third,
what should the role of the believer be in relationship to modern Israel? In a
little more pointed way of putting it, As a citizen of our country and as a
believer what role should the believer have politically in terms of support for
Israel? There are actually three basic positions that we could address here.
One is the position of replacement theology. Remember, replacement theology is
the view that the church has completely replaced Israel in God’s plan—in terms
of the promises, the covenants and the prophecies of the Old Testament. Replacement
theology says that Israel forfeited their right to be God’s people because of
their rejection of Jesus Christ as their Messiah. So according to them there
would be no compulsion, no basis, no reason whatsoever to politically support
the nation Israel because they are just a people now like any other people,
there is nothing special about them.
Then
there is the position of Christian Zionism. This is a term that we have to be
careful with because it is applied to a spectrum of people. There are two
groups: Christian Zionists and hyper-Christian Zionists. Christian Zionists
would be defined the same way that a number of people, for example “Friends of
Israel and their ministry, and another of others, as the right of the Jews to
live in their historical homeland. Notice that there are two things missing
from that definition. One is a right to being their own autonomous nation. That
wasn’t the historic view back in the 19th century. As modern Zionism
developed in the 1800s it was simply a recognition that the Jews had a right to
live in their historic homeland that God had promised them. Of course, at that
time they were still under the control of the Ottoman empire. Hyper-Christian
Zionism is something we have to watch out for. We’ll find that a certain number
of evangelicals fall into this trap. Hyper-Christian Zionists would say that
everything Israel does, everything that the modern nation does, must be
validated and supported by Christians and by the United States. That is
erroneous because they are an apostate nation right now. They are not in
alliance with God, it is the most communist nation in the world, the most
socialist economy, and even God in the Old Testament criticized and condemned
the Jews from any decisions they make, and that doesn’t make Him an
anti-Semite! There are a number of people who come along and say that if we
don’t support everything that the Jews do, that Israel does, that we are
ant-Semitic. So we have to figure out where the line of demarcation is in
relationship to that question. How far should we go in approving what Israel
does politically, militarily and socially?
The
fourth question we will address is, what is the history of the Jews since AD 70
when they were first removed from the land?
Because
of the role of Israel in God’s plan for the future of mankind and its place in
the future seven-year Tribulation it is important for us to address this whole
topic. We are basically talking about 4000 of history, and that is a tremendous
amount of history. If we just look at the Old Testament and the various periods
of Old Testament history there are nine different periods related to the Jews
in the biblical period, and that just takes us up to AD 70. Then we have to
deal with almost 2000 years of history up to the present. As we look at the
history of Israel we are going to divide it into three periods. First of all,
the biblical period from approximately 2091 BC (when Abraham was 75 years old)
to AD 70, i.e. the biblical period related to Israel. Following that we have the
post-biblical period from AD 70 to 1839 when modern Zionism was born and the
hope and desire for the Jews to return to their national homeland. Then the
modern period will cover 1839 to the present, 2006.
The
biblical period we will divide into nine periods: the patriarchal period, the
sojourn and the theocracy. The sojourn is the time from Joseph to Moses. Then
the theocracy which began with the Exodus, the united kingdom, the divided
kingdom, the exile, post-exile period, the Hasmonaean
period, and then the Roman period. The post-biblical period, AD 70 to 1839, and
then the modern period.
The
patriarchal period begins when God first calls Abraham in Ur of the Chaldees, Genesis 12:1-3. This would be about 2091 BC.
Joseph enters as a slave to Egypt in 1899 BC, and that would be the beginning
of the transition to the Jews being in Egypt. So we date the sojourn from 1899
BC to the Exodus in 1446 BC. From 1446-1051 BC was the period of the theocracy.
This is when God is the ultimate authority in Israel and it covers the period
of the forty years in the wilderness, the period of the conquest under Joshua,
and the period of the judges up to the anointing of Saul as king in 1051 BC.
Then we have the period of the united kingdom when there was one king over the
twelve tribes of Israel. There are three kings in the period of the united
kingdom: Saul, David and Solomon. At the end of Solomon’s reign and Solomon
dies his son Rehoboam is young and refuses to listen
to the wise council of the older counselors of his father. He listens to the
young men and decides to increase the already heavy taxation. There was one of
the first tax revolts in history and the ten northern tribes of Israel under
the leadership of Jereboam I rebel against Rehoboam and establish the northern kingdom of Israel. So
now Israel is divided into two sections, the southern kingdom of Judah (Judah
and Benjamin), and the northern kingdom of Israel. None of the northern kings
are ever said to be good. Every one of them does what is evil in the eyes of
the Lord and follows in the sins of Jereboam the son
of Nebat. The sin of Jereboam
is that he recognizes that there needed to be a unity of not only political
unity but there needed to be a religious unity, and he couldn’t have all of his
citizens traipsing down to Jerusalem for all of the festivals, so he
established an alternate religion in the northern kingdom. Her had his people
construct a golden calf and he said, “This is the god who brought you up out of
Egypt.” So he introduced idolatry and a new worship center for the northern
kingdom, and all of the kings in the north followed him in that idolatry. This
is the period from 1051-931 BC. Then from 931-722 BC in the north when the
Assyrians destroy the northern kingdom and it goes out under the fifth cycle of
discipline. Then the southern kingdom is destroyed by the Babylonians under
Nebuchadnezzar in 586 BC and the temple is destroyed. According to the legends
of the Jews the day that the temple was destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar is the same
day that the second temple was destroyed by Titus in AD 70. The period from
Solomon to 586 BC is also called the period of the first temple. Then comes the
period of the exile, the post-exile, the Hasmonaean
period, and the Roman period.
One
other terms that is used is the term of the first temple, from Solomon to the
exile. Once the exile occurs and Babylon comes in, that period from 586 up to
the present is called the time of the Gentiles. Even though at times, like today,
there is a Jewish state it is still dominated by Gentile powers. It does not
have the same kind of autonomy that it had under David and Solomon.
We
start back with the patriarchs. Just after 1000 BC we are pretty sure that the
date of the dedication of the temple was in 966 BC. We know from 1 Kings 6:1
that this occurred 480 years after the Exodus which occurred in 1446, 430 years
after Jacob entered Egypt in 1876 BC. Isaac would have been born 2066 BC and
Abraham 2166 BC. So that gives us the time frame of the patriarchal period from
Abram’s birth up to the Exodus. When we look at the Old Testament from the time
of the Exodus on we can break it down like this. There was the theocracy from
1446 up to 1051 when Saul is anointed king. The there was the united monarchy
from 1051 to 931, and then there was the division of the northern kingdom and
the southern kingdom. The northern kingdom goes out in 722, the southern
kingdom in 586, and then there is the return from the exile which is referred
to as the post-exilic period.
Why
do we study this? Why is Israel so important? What is so significant about the
Jews? This is something that we must address. It might be a good principle not
to give foreign aid to anybody but Jews are different, they are still God’s
people. Look at the emphasis in the Scripture. Over a 185 times in the Old
testament the Jews are called “My people,” even when they are apostate, even
when they are idolatrous, even when they are in rebellion against God, even
when they are out of the land during the exile they are still God’s people.
Jerusalem
is mentioned 671 times in the Old Testament; 813 times in the entire Bible. If
we expand that to other names for Jerusalem, such as Salem and Zion, then there
are over 980 references to Jerusalem which is the center of Israel, as well
see. Jerusalem is not mentioned one time in the Koran. Jerusalem only became a
holy city in Islam when the Jews started coming back. It is all part of the
angelic conflict.
So
what does the Scripture say about the importance of Israel and the importance
of Jerusalem? The first thing we see is that God has staked out a city that is
His city, and it is this city that He is going to use the impact on the entire
world. Psalm 48:2, “Beautiful in elevation, the joy of the whole earth, is
mount Zion, on the sides of the north, the city of the great King.” Psalm
78:68, “But chose the tribe of Judah, the mount Zion which he loved.” Psalm
132:13, “For the LORD has chosen Zion; he has desired it for his dwelling
place.” Even if they are apostate this is till the city that God has chosen and
indicated that will be His eternal place. Jerusalem is the only city on the
earth that is going to last into eternity. Psalm 133:3, “It is like the dew of Hermon, descending upon the mountains of Zion: for there
the LORD commanded the blessing, even life for evermore.” Zechariah 2:8, “For
thus says the LORD of hosts; He sent me after glory to the nations which
plunder you: for he that touches you touches the apple of his eye.” The context
there is not talking about Israel; it is talking about Jerusalem, the place He
chose to dwell in in the Old Testament, the city He
first visited after His birth in Bethlehem, the place where He was crucified,
the place where He rose from the dead, the place where He ascended to heaven
and the place where He will come when he returns. Isaiah 59:20, “And the
Redeemer shall come to Zion, and to those that turn from transgression in
Jacob, says the LORD.” (Incidentally, that is a good Trinitarian passage: the
Redeemer is different from the speaker) Zechariah 14:4, “And his feet shall
stand in that day upon the mount of Olives, which faces Jerusalem on the east,
and the mount of Olives shall be split in two from east to west, making be a
very large valley; and half of the mountain shall move toward the north, and
half of it toward the south.”
Throughout
history Jews and Christians have extolled the beauty of Jerusalem. Ezekiel 5:5,
“Thus says the Lord GOD; This is Jerusalem: I have set it in the midst of the
nations and countries that are round about her.” We know in the New Testament
that it was from it was from Jerusalem that the church began to expand. Jesus
told the disciples to take the gospel to Jerusalem, then Judea and Samaria, and
then to the uttermost parts of the earth—Acts 1:8. The Babylonian Talmud stated
that “Israel lies at the center of the earth and Jerusalem lies at the center
of the land of Israel.” They are not talking geographically, they are talking
ideologically and theologically that Israel is at the center of all history. We
can’t begin to understand history until we understand the place of Israel.
Everything revolves around Israel, everything since the Abrahamic covenant is
related to the Abrahamic covenant. So the basic assumption that we are going to
make at the beginning of this series is that Jerusalem is the theological
center of the world and that Israel is at the theological center of history,
and that the Jews are God’s chosen vehicle to bring blessing to the world. No
city on earth has the value, the prestige, the security has that Israel has,
its history goes back 4200 years and will extend into the future into eternity
in the new heavens and the new earth.
So
let’s start looking at Israel in the past. Why does God love Zion so much?
Psalm 87:2, “The LORD loves the gates of Zion more than all the dwellings of
Jacob.” This is one of the many references in Scripture to Zion. Zion
originally has the idea of a fortress and it referred initially to the
mountains where the Jebusites had a small fortified
city. Under David the Jews conquered Zion, the Jebusite
city of Salem, and began to establish themselves there. But as we look at the
Scriptures we see numerous Scriptures that emphasize the importance of Zion to
God. Zion technically refers to the original fortification, the fortified hill,
the temple mount, and it comes to refer to other mountains there and to
Jerusalem itself. Ultimately it is applied to the entire nation. 1 Kings 8:1,
“Then Solomon assembled the elders of Israel, and all the heads of the tribes,
the chief of the fathers of the children of Israel, to king Solomon in
Jerusalem, that they might bring up the ark of the covenant of the LORD out of
the city of David, which is Zion.” Psalm 48:2, “Beautiful in elevation, the joy
of the whole earth, is mount Zion, on the sides of the north, the city of the
great King.” Psalm 50:2, “Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty, God has
shined.” Psalm 74:2, “Remember your congregation, which you have purchased
[redeemed] of old; the rod of your inheritance, which you have redeemed; this
mount Zion, wherein you have dwelt.” Revelation 14:1, “And I looked, and, lo, a
Lamb stood on the mount Zion, and with him an hundred forty and four thousand,
having his Father's name written in their foreheads,” a reference to the
144,000 Jews who will be sealed, twelve thousand from the twelve tribes, and
their function will be to take the gospel throughout the world during the
Tribulation period.
Not
only does the Old Testament emphasize the value and significance of Israel and
Jerusalem but so does the New Testament. In Romans 9-11 Paul gives us his
theological basis for arguing that God still has a plan for Israel and he
ultimately will fulfill His Old testament promises to Israel and He will bring
them back to the land. Romans 9:3-5, “For I could wish that myself were
accursed from Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh: who
are Israelites; to whom pertain the adoption, and the glory, and the covenants,
and the giving of the law, and the service of God, and the promises; whose are
the fathers, and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came, who is over all,
God blessed for ever. Amen.” When is Paul writing Romans? Around 62-63 AD,
after they have rejected Christ, after the church has been founded. He is still
emphasizing that the Jews have a central place in the plan of God. They are
still God’s people even in apostasy.
To
understand this and the significance of Israel in the New Testament, and why it
is important to study this, we have to take a trip all the way back to genesis
to lay our foundation. The significance of Jerusalem and the land of Israel
can’t be separated from the special place that the Jews have in the plan of
God. Deuteronomy 7:6-8, “For you are a holy [set apart] people to the LORD your
God: the LORD your God has chosen you to be a special people to himself, above
all people that are upon the face of the earth. The LORD did not set his love
upon you, nor choose you, because ye were more in number than any people; for
you were the fewest of all people: but because the LORD loved you, and because
he would keep the oath which he had sworn to your fathers, has the LORD brought
you out with a mighty hand, and redeemed you out of the house of bondage, from
the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt.” God’s choice of Israel was His own
sovereign choice to impact the world through the descendants of Abraham.
Jerusalem
began as a small Canaanite city on the site of the hills of Moriah.
Moriah is where Abraham took his son Isaac to sacrifice
him when the Lord commanded him to do so and, of course, the Lord provided a
substitute for him. It remained a Canaanite stronghold of the Jebusites for over 1000 years. It’s past history is going
to be very different from it future history. Zechariah 14:21, “Yes, every pot
in Jerusalem and in Judah shall be holiness to the LORD of hosts: and all they
that sacrifice shall come and take of them, and cook therein: and in that day
there shall be no longer a Canaanite in the house of the LORD of hosts.”
The
city is first mentioned in Genesis 14:8 when we read about Abraham returning
from defeating the four kings” alliance, and he returns and is going to go to
the king-priest of Salem. The king-priest is Melchizedek—Melchizedek means king
of righteousness—and we are told we are told that he comes to give a tithe, a
special offering to God. It is actually Melchizedek who comes out of Salem in
order to greet Abraham. This takes us back to the Abrahamic covenant, reminding
us that there are three components to that covenant—land, seed, and blessing.
And it is the land that God has given to Israel, and He gives them the title to
that land on the basis of this covenant. Just because they don’t live there
doesn’t mean the title is lost. It just means that God as the land owner is not
allowing them to live there because of their disobedience. But it is out from
that land, those people, that a world-wide blessing would come.
Along
with that there is a prediction that Israel would be disobedient and that there
would be a world-wide dispersion of the Jews because of their disobedience. But
the promise in Leviticus 26 and 27 is that there would be a world-wide
restoration that would take place. That has never happened yet. Just as there
was a world-wide dispersion, which is what we have seen for the last 2000
years, so there would e a world-wide regathering. The
regathering from Babylon wasn’t world-wide. Abraham
was told to take Isaac to the mountains of Moriah,
and that was where he was to offer Isaac the promised as a sacrifice. And it
was there that Abraham passed his test, recognizing that God had given him
Isaac and that even if he were forced to sacrifice Isaac God would raise him
from the dead. Hebrews 11:19.