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| Read Isaiah 43 v 1 and 10 |
The whole chapter, but these verses in particular, makes it quite clear that the nation of Israel is God’s prime witness of His existence and purpose.
We now want to look at how remarkable the predictions of the Bible are in relation to the nation of Israel, also called the Jews or God’s people. We will have to look briefly at the history of the nation of Israel.
In the days of Jesus Christ there was a thriving Jewish nation in the land of Israel. Hundreds of years earlier the nation had been independent, but before Jesus was born it became a part of the Roman Empire.
The Jews did not take kindly to being ruled by foreigners. For many years the country seethed with discontent and rebellion.
Between A.D. 66 and A.D. 135 the
Jews fought three fierce wars of independence. But each time they were
defeated, and by A.D. 135 the Romans had had enough trouble. They were
determined to stop these revolts once and for all.
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The Romans destroyed Jerusalem and plundered the Temple in A.D. 70. The scene is pictured on the triumphal Arch of Titus in Rome. The seven - branched candlestick was taken from the Temple. |
With typical Roman thoroughness they utterly destroyed Jerusalem and ploughed up its site. Then they erased its name from their maps, and scattered all the inhabitants of Judea (the main part of the land of Israel) around the Roman Empire.
And that, thought the Romans, was that.
But they were wrong. For century after century the Jews survived as a nation without a country. Wherever they went they were hated, treated as an inferior race, and made to live in ghettos. For seventeen centuries, on and off, the exiled Jews were persecuted, massacred, or made to flee for their lives from one country to another. Yet somehow they survived it all.
Then, at the end of the 19th century, nearly eighteen hundred years after their ancestors were exiled from it, a few Jews began to trickle back to their homeland. Within the twentieth century the Jewish population of the land of Israel has risen from a few thousand to several million. By 1948 the Jews there felt sufficiently powerful to proclaim their independence. The following year the sovereign State of Israel was admitted to membership of the United Nations.
1. The Jews would be scattered
all over the world, hated, persecuted, and driven from country to country.
| Read Deuteronomy 28 v 37 and 64 to 66 |
2. Meanwhile, their land, once
so fruitful, would lie desolate.
| Read Leviticus 26 v 33 and 34 |
3. They would survive all these
troubles, and would actually outlive their persecutors.
| Read Jeremiah 30 v
11 and Hosea 3 v 4 and 5 |
4. Eventually, while still disobeying
God, they would go back to their own land again.
| Read Ezekiel 11 v17,
36 v 22 to 24 and Jeremiah 30 v 7 to 10 |
These seven extracts, taken from five different books, are typical of all Old Testament teaching about the future of Israel. Everyone, believer and unbeliever alike, agrees that the Old Testament was written before the time of Christ. Consequently, it is absolutely certain that these prophecies about the Jews were written hundreds of years before they were fulfilled.
The prophecies about the exile of the Jews were not fulfilled until the second century after Christ. The prophecies about their wanderings were fulfilled continuously from the second to the nineteenth centuries. And the prophecies about the return of the Jews to their homeland were not fulfilled until the twentieth century.
The object of this assignment is to encourage you to consider a little more deeply the prophecies you have already looked at and show you some more remarkable prophecies.
Look again at the “History written in advance” section and write exactly what is predicted in the references we mentioned.
Some people say that predictions like these were clever guesses. But if you think about it, you will realise that this cannot be the case. If people want to predict the future, they use past experience of similar things. When these predictions were made there was no other nation that had a similar history, so there was no reason to suggest that these things might happen to the Israelites. In fact, all down the ages no other nation has had a similar history.
There are predictions about other nations contemporary with the prophets. Have a look at Ezekiel 25. This chapter predicts the end of four of Israel’s neighbours. Isaiah 13 v 19 and 20 and Jeremiah 51 v 36 and 37 predict the end of the superpower of the day, Babylon. Not only that, they predict that Babylon would never be lived in again.
Add details of these prophecies about the nations of Ammon, Moab, Edom, Philistia and Babylon to your list of those about Israel. From what we have said, and if you look in the relevant history books, you will see that every detail has happened as predicted.
There are many more equally remarkable prophecies. Ask via the e-mail request form and we can show you some of them.
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