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Daily Devotional

God’s Promises

March 2, 2018 - 12:00 am

This Devotional's Hebrew Word


(rejoice)

Sing, barren woman,
you who never bore a child;
burst into song, shout for joy,
you who were never in labour;
because more are the children of the desolate woman
than of her who has a husband,”
says the LORD. – Isaiah 54:1

The year 2018 is important for Israel and the Jewish people as we celebrate the modern State of Israel’s 70th Birthday. You can be part of this momentous milestone with Rabbi Eckstein’s 70 devotions offered now through April 19, Israel’s Independence Day. These devotions are tied to our Keys to Israel – six fundamental principles underlying God’s covenantal relationship with His chosen people and His Holy Land using the acrostic I.S.R.A.E.L.

This devotion is part of ten devotions focusing on the letter “A” – Aliyah, or immigration to Israel – exploring the fulfilment today of biblical prophecy and God’s promise that He would bring back His children to their ancient homeland, Israel.

Weddings are always special. However, whenever I am blessed to attend a wedding in Jerusalem, I am particularly overwhelmed with emotions and joy. This is because a wedding in Jerusalem is not just a demonstration of the love between a couple and their commitments to each other; it is also a demonstration of God’s love for His people and His commitment to fulfilling the promises that He made long ago.

Recently, I attended a wedding that had a magnificent view of Jerusalem in the background. Underneath the wedding canopy stood the groom and his family. The groom was a Yemenite Jew. His grandparents and parents were forced to leave Yemen after the state of Israel was declared a nation. Then the bride walked down the aisle flanked by her parents. Her grandparents were Holocaust survivors who had moved to England after the war; her parents had moved to Israel when she was young.

As these two souls came together in matrimony, the significance went way beyond their individual lives. I could hear the words of the blessing we say on holidays and special occasions echoing in my mind: “Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the universe, who has kept us alive, and sustained us, and enabled us to reach this moment . . . .” So many miracles, over so many centuries, had brought us to that moment!

We read in the book of Genesis about Sarah: “Now Sarai was childless because she was not able to conceive” (Genesis 11:30). These verses in Isaiah similarly begin, “Sing, barren woman, you who never bore a child . . . because more are the children of the desolate woman than of her who has a husband . . .” Though Sarai (who was later called Sarah by God) was barren, God would keep His promise and she would become the mother of a great nation. Similarly, in this chapter in Isaiah, God was speaking to Jerusalem, who seemed barren and alone. God promised Jerusalem that she would once again be the home of a great nation. In both cases, and always, God kept His promises.

The Jewish sages teach that Sarah, as she was later named by God, was not physically capable of having children and that the birth of Isaac was a complete miracle. Yet, however unlikely it seemed, it happened because God said it would. For roughly two millennia it seemed utterly impossible for the Jewish people to return to Jerusalem, but they did, because God said so.

Let us be strengthened and inspired as we watch the fulfilment of God’s promises before our very eyes. If a barren woman can become the mother of many, and the Jewish people can return to their homeland, what is possible for you?

     

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