
(Taken from the January 2002 edition)
By Benjamin Davis
In the wake of all the turmoil of Israel’s role in
the Middle East, many sincere Christians have found themselves wondering
if what has been taking place is the fulfillment of Bible prophecy.
Indeed, there are many Bible passages that, from a natural perspective,
could seem to prophesy the recent turbulence. However, Father God desires
His children to learn to see things from His spiritual perspective through
the lenses of His new covenant.
The prophet Jeremiah prophesied this new covenant:
“Behold, the days are coming…when I will make a new covenant with
the house of Israel and with the house of Judah, not according to the
covenant that I made with their fathers in the day that I took them by the
hand to lead them out of the land of Egypt, My covenant which they broke,
though I was a husband to them,” says the LORD. “But this is the covenant
that I will make with the house of Israel after those days…I will put My
law in their minds, and write it on their hearts; and I will be their God,
and they shall be My people” (Jer. 31:31-33).
Jeremiah’s prophecy is quoted in the New Testament
(Heb. 8:7-13, 10:15-18) to show that he was prophesying about God’s new
creation people, the church of Jesus Christ.
What seems to be little understood in relation to
Old and New Testament prophecy is that God went through a divorce. In
Hosea 2:2 we read,
Bring charges against your mother, bring charges;
For she is not My wife, nor am I her Husband!
God pledged Himself in the old covenant as a husband
to Israel, but because of Israel’s continued unfaithfulness to the
covenant, He was forced to cast her off (divorce her). However, because He
is the God of restoration, He had a plan for redemption. That plan is
found in Jesus Christ and His new covenant church, and His prophets
foretold of it:
“And it shall be, in that day,”
Says the LORD,
“That you will call Me ‘My Husband’…
I will betroth you to Me forever” (Hos. 2:16, 19).
“That day” of remarriage between God and His
people describes the day of the new covenant with Christ (Hos. 2:23; Rom.
9:25-26).
The Apostle Paul describes this new covenant
remarriage in Romans.
Therefore, my brethren, you
also have become dead to the law through the body of Christ, that you may
be married to another—to Him who was raised from the dead (Christ), that
we should bear fruit to God (Rom 7:4). Paul was saying that those who
are still under the old covenant law cannot be married to Christ in the new
covenant. The reason for this is that the law by itself serves only to
allow the sinful nature of man to fully come forth (Rom. 7:7-12) revealing
how truly sinful man is apart from Christ.
The law that old covenant Israel lived under (and
still lives under today) proved to be incapable of producing the fruit
(Gal. 5:22-23) that God desired from His people. That is the reason for
the divorce:
For if that first covenant had been faultless, then no place
would have been sought for a second. Because finding fault with them, He
says: Behold…I will make a new covenant…(Heb. 8:7-8).
The culmination of God’s
divorce with old covenant Israel as a nation was prophesied again by Jesus
in Matthew chapters 21-24. He stated His generation would see the
finalization of the divorce in the destruction of the Jewish temple
forever and the end of its old covenant ways (Matt. 24:2,14,34). That
prophecy was fulfilled in 70 AD when the Roman army took Jerusalem,
destroyed its temple, and ended the Jewish religion of sacrifices and
offerings. Simply said, the significance of the old covenant nation of
Israel was destroyed forever, and the nation that currently exists in the
Middle East is a
non-biblical nation. It is no longer connected to Bible prophecy!
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The good news is that God has remarried the new
covenant spiritual Israel, His church. (Rev. 19:7,9, 22:17). The church is
the nation that is fulfilling Bible prophecy today as a “holy nation” (1
Pet. 2:9). She is the bride of Christ and has the laws of God written in
her heart and mind. God’s Holy Spirit dwells in her to cause her to
always be faithful to Him (Ezek. 36:25-27). To all who are in the Middle
East, and to all who are not in the Middle East, “the Spirit and the
Bride say, ‘Come!’”
Benjamin Davis is an associate pastor
of Abundant
Life Covenant Church. |