Transcript
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Hey, you. Stop right there. There's a
phenomenon that's spreading like
wildfire. This is not a normal
phenomenon. This is something very, very
divine. And as time has gone on, it's
only spread more and more. This
phenomenon that I'm discussing with you
has spread probably faster than the
coronavirus. And I want to make sure
that everybody's prepared for it because
if you have not encountered it yet, it
is coming your way. This phenomenon is
called anti-Semitism.
Let's talk about it.
Hey, welcome back to the Knees in Black
Show, where on this podcast we discuss
our faith, we discuss growing and
becoming complete and true servants of
God, even in a world that abhors him,
even in a world that is against him. We
will stand up and we will fight for
what's right. And that's what this
podcast is all about. So, discussing
today a topic that everybody is very
familiar with right now. If you haven't
been familiar with it, it's because
you've been living under a rock. And
it's anti-Semitism. But I don't want to
just talk about this. I want to talk
about it from a biblical perspective. We
need to be able to see this as the
phenomenon that it is. This is something
that is divine. It's been going on
forever. We're living in a time right
now where there are many Jews who have
only thought about or only looked This
is something
that has affected their ancestors or
their their, you know, their
grandparents even, but never thought
that they would be living in a time
where they would be able to see it, you
know, face to face like we are seeing it
right now. Now, I want to discuss
something straight out of the back. I'm
38 years old. So, that means 38 years of
my life I've been black,
African-American, whatever you call it.
I call myself black. I'm from America.
That's what I grew up knowing, so I I'm
more comfortable comfortable with the
term black. However,
I've been Jewish for about going on 12
years. And I've said this publicly in
other forums, and I'm saying it here on
my own podcast because, you're my
audience, so I'm making sure that you
guys understand how I honestly feel.
I have had way more anti-Semitism in the
last 12 years than I've had racism in
the last 38 years of my life.
And that's very, very important because
when I say that this is a phenomenon,
it's something that really, really
doesn't make sense. That the whole
entire world, bar none. I'm saying maybe
there's some places, but ultimately most
places have some type of opinion on the
Jewish people, whether good or whether
bad. There's never been a time, you
know, I I'm from Seattle, Washington, so
there was never a time I remember on my
way to synagogue on on a Saturday
morning that anybody ever yelled at me
on Seward Park Avenue, "Oh, you black
this." "Oh, you inward." "Oh, you this."
I I just can't remember a time, not only
when I was on Seward Park Avenue, but
anywhere in the world that I've ever
been, that somebody has said something
to me outlandish
because of the color of my skin.
As opposed to when it comes to
anti-Semitism, I've been everywhere. And
I'm not going to say in every single
place I've encountered it, but I've
encountered it a crazy amount of times
for a person who myself wasn't born
Jewish. We'll get into that, what
brought me to Judaism because it's very,
very important for this podcast today.
However, for a person that wasn't even
born Jewish, I've encountered so much
anti-Semitism. And some of these things
you could see yourself. You could see,
and I don't know if everybody's the
trolls or if they're if they're bots.
I'm sure some of them are. There's some
ways to tell if whether or not they're
bots. Even if you look at my socials,
right? Which many of you should are
already see because you should already
be following me. So, you many of you
will see on my socials, on my Instagram,
whatever, the amount of comments, uh
Twitter, whatever it is,
that come from people that are so
anti-Semitic and so anti-Israel for no
reason. I can be I can be walking a dog.
I don't have a dog and I and I and if I
did, I probably wouldn't walk it and
then they probably can take my dog. But,
I don't have a dog. But, if I was
walking a dog, all I have to do is put
up a a picture of me or or a a video of
me and I'm going to get I don't know how
many 37, you know, free Palestine, you
baby killer, you this, you that.
And I don't understand it. I'm being
honest with you that this is a
phenomenon that I don't All I have to do
is breathe and I'll be called some type
of anti-Semitic slur, whether it's on
the comments pages, whether it's
messages uh that people are trying to
send to me or whatever it is. So, this
is something that the world has never
seen before and and I'm not always
trying to compare, but I just That's I,
you know, I'm a part of both minority
groups. So, for me, it's very, very
important for me to be able to give you
that, for you to understand. Now, many
people have been trying to define what
it is to be anti-Semitic. What is
anti-Semitism? I don't know if I can
actually define it as much as I can tell
you its symptoms. Sometimes, we can't
define exactly what it is. I had a
friend who had a surgery the other day
and it was a very well-known, you know,
surgery due to something that, you know,
people go through medically. And my wife
asked me, "What is that?"
And I tried to explain it to her, but
the only way I could really explain it
to her was to tell her what the symptoms
of it is. And what's interesting about
anti-Semitism that I don't find by any
other bigotry, any other race racism or
any other hate towards another group,
is that anti-Semitism
usually turns into some form of action.
You know, there were times in American
history, even during the Jim Crow South,
there were times,
uh you know, even after that era, or
saying growing up that I'm sure that
there were a lot of things that were
said inside of people's living room.
And I'm talking, you know, for
you know, in this particular case, you
know, we'll say a white living room that
people may have felt about, you know,
their black neighbors or counterparts or
whatever, different things like that.
That was said usually privately.
Also, the only thing I would say that is
probably different that I will will be
honest about, we weren't living in a
time where there was social media. But I
think in general, the way that people
were
years ago, they were more cautious of
the things that they would say publicly
and the things that they would keep
private to themselves. So, a lot of
times people didn't really encounter
you know, face-to-face racism. I'm not
talking about the Jim Crow era, I'm
talking about these these eras after,
you know, these the 90s, the 80s,
whatever the case. I'm saying the
pre-social media age of what we've been
dealing with. Most people, if they had
an opinion about anything about Chinese,
about whatever, you know, it usually
didn't make the public forum.
And people would feel uncomfortable and
rather they would feel very embarrassed
that if they did say something and it
got out, how they would be looked at.
Today, we are facing a brazen generation
where people don't really care about the
things that they say and how that's
going to affect another people.
Specifically with anti-Semitism,
the difference between that, and I've
seen a lot of other influencers and
people say that, you know, we all we can
we can attack the Jews just like we can
attack any other race or you know, they
I I don't think the word is attack, but
we can be critical, that's the word. Be
critical of the Jewish people, we can be
critical of Israel in the same way that
we do the black community. Look how
critical we were against Black Lives
Matter or or other things like that.
There's a big difference.
Because
being critical
of other groups,
other races,
um other ethnicities, other cultures,
does not usually you It does not usually
lead to
a worldwide
disdain and campaign of hatred towards
that particular group.
It It
if anything, it could be very localized
against the adversary group. It could be
very, you know, localized to a certain
uh culture of people, the disdain that
they have for the other culture.
But when anti-Semitism
is brought into the to the picture and
this, you know, critical Now, I'm not
saying you can't be critical of Jews and
you can't be critical of Israel.
But it's not necessarily the same thing.
And no matter who the group is that a
person's being critical of, a person
always has to ask themselves, if
them criticizing that people, that
nation, that whatever,
where is it coming from?
Why do I feel the need to be critical?
What and and how well-versed am I in on
this particular people or this
particular group? And this goes to
everybody, not just anti-Semitism.
Person usually
doesn't think about like, where does my
strong opinions about this other group
come from, right? It's very, very
important to understand what's going on.
With anti-Semitism in particular,
usually leads to Now, I I've never seen
somebody say, you know, uh
first off, something bad about me
because of color of my skin, which leads
to, you know, 10 other black people
being mugged, you know, and uh in in in
the Bronx or any other place or are beat
to smithereens or every time that, you
know, black people on and multiple uh uh
different communities come outside, they
see nooses and and and, you know,
burning crosses on the front lawn. We're
not We're not dealing with that today.
During the Jim Crow era, there was some
instances of that. That's going to be
for a whole different podcast, but the
truth of the matter is is that when it
comes to anti-Semitism, what you see is
that in Germany,
there's a uprising. In Amsterdam,
there's uprising. And many of the Arab
nations, there's uprisings. All
throughout Europe,
the United States, college campuses,
we're seeing this spread very, very
fast.
Do in large part because of social
media. And because of social media and
its widespread, allows for things to get
out there faster.
But the question is,
why is everybody hating on the Jews?
What is the real question? And I really
want to get into that. So, because the
reason why it's important for me is
because
Jewish suffering
is one of the biggest reasons on why I
converted to Judaism. It's one of the
biggest draws that there was for me to
realize that the God of Israel was the
one true God. And I'mma tell you why.
I grew up in Seattle, Washington. I was
very, very exposed to gun violence and
different things like that. Hey guys,
what's going on? I want to tell you
really quickly about an organization
here in Ramat Beit Shemesh named Colel
Korel. Colel Korel is an organization
that provides essential support to kids
with dyslexia and other learning
disabilities. They do everything from
making sure that they have personalized
lesson plans, all the way to advocacy,
which is very important. A lot of these
kids are falling through the cracks in
the regular system, and a lot of them
are misdiagnosed. But Colel Korel,
through their assessment, has found that
most of the time it's just learning
disabilities. Unfortunately, because of
the war, people have reallocated their
funds to different war efforts and
misplaced families, rightfully so. But
unfortunately, what it's led to was a
lot of these kids falling through the
cracks. And now this wonderful
organization is at the brink of turning
kids away. I will never advocate for
something unless I was able to
personally tell you how amazing the
organization is. I want everybody that
can, please go to kolcare.org
and make a donation. We must keep this
organization open and running and being
able to service all the families that
they service. For a long time, when it
comes to organizations, many people have
asked me about unless I know personally
that I'm dealing with real people, I
will never ask my audience. So again,
please make a donation today to Kol
Care, that's k o l k o r e h dot org.
And I can honestly say that you will be
changing lives. Okay, back to the show.
For the whole entirety of the story, I'm
going to have to refer you to other
podcasts. But my introduction to
religion was Islam. My grandfather was a
Sunni Muslim. He taught me how to pray
in Arabic. I prayed with him five times
a day. Uh unfortunately, he he lived
with us for about a year, year and a
half or so, um before he ended up going
back to prison. That's where he was for
most of his life he had he he had he had
spent in prison. I think that's
initially where he converted to Islam,
um which is a bit different because
there it's well known that a lot of
African Americans or black men who are
in prison would convert to the Nation of
Islam, but not necessarily to become a
Sunni Muslim. But anyway, that was what
my grandfather did. He came to live with
us and he taught me how to pray. I would
go with him to the mosque on Fridays.
But one of the things that he did to me,
did for me, I guess I would say, during
the holiday season from the prisons they
would send gifts
from family members to loved ones. And
my grandfather wanted to get me
something, but because he, you know, was
a Muslim, he was a Sunni Muslim,
there weren't a lot of options for him
to actually send me things. He couldn't
send me a Quran, he couldn't send me
other things. So he wanted to send me
something, but he didn't want to send me
anything that would lead me to
Christianity because, you know, his
family he had come from Christianity and
he was a very devout and strong Muslim
convert, but he wanted to give me
something that had something to do with
spirituality. That's what ruled his life
as a Sunni Muslim. So, he sent me a DVD
called the Prayer of Jabez, Yabetz in
Hebrew,
which is a very, very interesting
prayer. You have to see it in the book
of Chronicles. I won't go in depth into
the prayer, but I remember watching the
DVD over and over and over again.
And I don't know what it was. I was
heavily, heavily, heavily drawn to
prayer for some reason. Um I I watched
this and it went into me. It gave me
desires for spirituality. This is the
earliest time of me remembering anything
spiritual taking place in my life was
watching this DVD. And I remember
watching it over and over again and then
trying to find a Bible that would lead
me to, you know, help me to find where
the actual verse was that this prayer
took place. And then I would start
praying it. Now, I was maybe 7 years old
or something like that uh when I had
this, but that was the beginning. So,
then my grandfather comes to live with
us, teaches me Islam. I'm with him,
going to the mosque with him. And then
he ends up going back to prison.
Unfortunately, unfortunately, he
violated his parole and his life expired
in prison.
So, I went on with life becoming a
complete product of my environment.
Everything that I saw, I did, ran with
street gangs, got into a lot of trouble,
was expelled from the school district. I
found myself in a place where it was
becoming very, very dark.
And I was running with all the wrong
people and I found myself in all the
wrong places at all the wrong times.
So, finally, I one summer was talking
with a friend of mine. I had already
recorded maybe two songs already this
summer. I was already into rap and
everything at that that age.
And a friend of mine invited me to go
with him to after school program that
was at a Christian camp.
So, I go to this after school program. I
develop a relationship with the people
there. They had a hip-hop program. That
was a that was a major draw that I was
going to be able to record and make
music. And I'm going there. It was a
Christian organization.
And being there at that place saved my
life. I would say literally saved my
life because of where I was headed
was down a very very very dark path. And
I've always even still today, no matter
how much of a, you know,
God-loving,
uh, you know, Torah-thumping Orthodox
Jew that I am, I have a major um, love
and hakaras hatov as we say in Hebrew,
uh, major sense of gratitude towards the
people that were in my life at that time
because
it was very very important that I met
those people at that time in my life and
went through what I went through at that
time.
So, after being there for maybe about a
year or so, I got invited to camp. I end
up going to camp. It was like a
missionary camp. I was introduced to
Christianity at that time on a very very
high level, right for me at that point
cuz I wasn't religious and didn't have
any religiosity so much in my house, um,
apart from the time that my grandfather
was there. So, being exposed to that and
that love that I had towards, um, that
that seeking and finding and and
questioning and trying to enter into a
world of spirituality, which I had
developed when I was young when I got
that small DVD, everything started to
flow again and started to come back. And
that really was the beginning of a
thriving and real relationship with God.
So, I
I became a reborn-again Christian.
And I it was great for me. Also, it was
crucial because I was going into high
school. So, then I went into high school
and I had a new lease on life, I would
say. So I thought that, you know, for
sure I would never go back any, you
know, ounce to the life that I was
living before or getting in trouble or
anything like that. So as I get into
high school and I'm, you know, exploring
my spirituality, I'm very, very strong
and active in all different type of
things in terms of a ministry and Bible
study groups and and I was a summer
intern for a lot of the camps there.
And I became really the poster child for
the organization because I was bringing
so many different kids from my high
school into this organization for
different
fellowship meetings and groups and and
leadership programs. So fast forwarding
a bit,
I'm going to go through the whole story,
but I found myself taking a major
backsliding right after I got out of
high school. I lost my mother to
overdose, which is really one of the
biggest things that really crushed me to
some degree in my heart. At least, I
wouldn't say crushed me, but it put me
in a place to where I was
more sensitive
to perhaps hear that God may have been
calling me in a certain direction.
So after I lose him after losing my
mother, I
I sort of try to close myself to some
degree to the to the people that were
around me and and only focus on music. I
was very, very heavily involved in
music. By this time I had some interest
from major record labels. And so I
really got into the gangster rap even
more and more even though that was in
complete conflict with where I was in my
life at that time. At least where I
thought myself to be.
So I sort of
going into that led me back into that
place. So I'm now in a in a even more
confusing place probably than ever
before because I was very unsure about
who I was.
So I ended up after this
getting into an
with another artist which led to a kill
or be killed situation. Like I said,
you'll hear this in a different podcast.
And my life at that point for me is
hanging in the balance. I need to figure
out what I'm going to do because either
I take this person's life or they're
going to come and take my life.
And I remember being in my living room
and falling to my knees and I started
crying and I just started praying and
praying and praying. I started crying.
And this was a deep pain for me because
you know, I was personifying a a
a career uh a person um that wasn't
really
who I was at that point in my life.
So, I felt even like a counterfeit. I
felt
very very silly.
And so, as I'm praying
long story short, I I ended up getting
out of the situation with the other
person. We talked and and everything got
put behind us, but now I'm left with
you know, I was praying so hard. I have
such a thirst now for spirituality in my
life and I want to get even closer to
God. So, I naturally picked up the
Bible, start going through the Bible.
And I had brand new eyes because there
was no one around to tell me how to
interpret verses, what it was and
anything like that. All I had was a
major drive to get close to God. And one
thing I connected to more than anything
else was prayer. I don't know, for
whatever reason, prayer became my thing.
And I started reading the Bible and I
was reading and going through it and as
I got to the prophets
I noticed something.
And this is going to connect to this
phenomenon. What I noticed inside the
prophets
was
this major
rebuke against the Jewish people. And it
happens over and over again. Even it
it really starts from the Torah itself.
Heavily throughout Deuteronomy, you'll
see that Moses is rebuking the Jewish
people, called them stiff-necked people,
telling them in the future you're going
to reject God. This repeats itself in
the book of Joshua. He says that that
one point you're going to turn away from
God, you'll serve the gods of others,
you'll leave the Torah, and and this
will happen, that will happen, this will
happen, that will happen.
So, now I'm starting to learn and I'm
going through now all the prophets. The
truth is that I had never learned up
until that point anything about Jewish
history. I didn't know anything about
it. I grew up in the Sewer Park area
where there was a lot of Jews, probably
the largest Orthodox Jewish community
for sure is in Sewer Park. I grew up
seeing Orthodox Jews, but I did not know
anything about Jewish Jewish history.
So,
I start doing my research because I'm
reading the biblical narrative. I wanted
to see if all these things actually
happened to the Jewish people. Now,
there was something that I already knew
that there was a such thing as
anti-Semitism. I didn't know it as
anti-Semitism, but there was something
that you would hear
here and there sly remarks of the Jews,
but I didn't really understand. I never
been face-to-face with actual
anti-Semitism. So, I started doing my
own research.
And what I found was obviously
staggering. Now, I'm telling you I made
it through public school most of my
years of high school. There was maybe 2
years I was expelled. I went to
alternative schools, but there was still
no excuse because I was on a normal
curriculum.
I had never heard of the Holocaust
before.
Yes, I'm embarrassed to say it as an
adult, uh but I I had never heard of the
Holocaust. I was 20 years old at this
point now.
And I never heard of it.
I started learning about the Holocaust,
the the Inquisition, the Spanish
Inquisition, and all the different
pogroms, and everything that befell the
Jewish people throughout the millennia.
And when I started to see that, I
started to wake up and realize the
divinity of the biblical
of the biblical narrative and the
biblical prophecy, what would be of the
Jewish people?
That it become clear to me that it was
well known
from the prophets and many different
other places, some of them we'll go
over, that in the last and final days
before the era and the coming of the
Messiah, that the Jewish people would be
surrounded by their enemies. That the
nations that surround the Jewish nation
will be enemies to the Jewish people.
So, that was very, very clear.
Now, how can you say, how can that bring
you to God? Like, why would that be the
one thing that would bring you? I mean,
it's pretty obvious, like, you know,
okay, that's great. You see that that's
that's one way, but for me, I was
perplexed by this. I was taken aback
that the Bible was able to describe with
such accuracy
the different things and curses that
would come upon the Jewish people if
they rejected God.
But, it didn't stop there for me.
Hey, what's going on? I had to stop
before a second because I want to tell
you, if you like what you're hearing,
and if you're getting value from what
you're hearing, please like and
subscribe to the channel. It helps us
get this out there. And ultimately, you
know what we're trying to do, spread the
name of God all throughout the world.
So, like and subscribe, hit the
notification bell so that anytime I put
out a video, you are going to be
informed first. What changed things for
me
was that the fact that the Jewish people
had not only suffered
and suffered for thousands of years of
exile,
but they were restore restored to their
home
with the same national identity
intact.
The Hebrew language, the values, the
culture, it's all there.
Back in Israel.
And what makes this is a
bigger phenomenon even than
anti-Semitism
is that
the Bible predicts this.
Not only did it predict the
anti-Semitism the Jewish people will
have, I'll cause it not to rain on your
land, the land will become barren,
you'll be driven to uh to the other
nations of the world. When you get to
those nations, those nations will
chastise you, they will hate you, right?
And at some point, there's a shift in
the relationship. God says he will start
to tap on the heart of the Jewish people
and wake them up and they'll realize all
of what they've done. They'll call out
to God
and slowly but surely, after a very long
time, it says in the book of of Hosea,
that the the Jewish people would dwell
for a very long time without a king,
without a without a sacrifice, right?
So, we know that this is going to be a
very long period of time that the Jewish
people are away from their land. And
then God says, then I'm going to bring
you out from all those nations and all
those lands, and he's going to
re-establish the Jewish people in
Israel.
This is insane because when you look at
this,
we are living in a time that right now
is like biblical prophecy is screaming
and yelling at every single one of us
and any person who believes in God, who
who who knows that, you know, God's word
and and and the Torah is true.
We'd be sleeping if we didn't recognize
this and we didn't think God that we
were living in such times to be able to
actually witness things that were
foretold from many years ago. So,
this is the one reason I would actually
say why I never will understand a person
who calls himself an atheist. Not just
an atheist, a Jewish atheist. And this
is the reason why it would never
it would never make sense for me because
this is probably the biggest oxymoron
that there could possibly be in the
world. And I'll tell you why. All of
biblical prophecy
points to one or two things. There's
many different things discussed about
what will happen in the final hour of
humanity.
And I'm talking about those last days.
And every single one of the prophecies,
bar none,
prophesy
about the future
being revolved around the Jewish people,
the Jewish nation,
the Jewish state,
and the Jewish king. Please God so.
So, the whole entire story
begins and ends with the fact that there
would be a Jewish people.
That's all the biblical prophecy, bar
none. Everything surrounded surrounded
around Israel, and I invite anybody to
look just to check if you want to. All
throughout the biblical narrative, all
surrounds the Jewish people.
So,
the reason why the Jewish atheist
becomes oxymoron is because
the Jew becomes the very proof to God,
to the rest of the world, that he exist.
So, the rest of the world has been busy
for many years trying to use science,
biology, different things like that to
disprove or to discredit God.
But nobody ever asked God
how it is that he can prove that he
exist, right? Obviously, because they
they don't believe. But we don't think
did God ever give a way that we would
know that he exist? Did he ever leave
some type of
way that we would know? I mean,
after all, he's God, right? So,
this is amazing if you think about it
this way.
If all the biblical prophecy
revolves around the fact that there's a
Jewish people at the end,
and God that same God tells us that
things would actually befall the Jewish
people that actually be befell them. And
it's over thousands of years, so you
can't say that anything is rigged
because, first off, you know, if you
look at any religious text, most people
would never say anything bad about
themselves or the religion or the people
of that religion. Everybody who comes
from that religion would be generally a
righteous person unless they are the
betrayer of, you know, whoever the
dominant figure of the religion is,
any person of that religion or that
faith is generally in all religions
spoken about with the utmost respect and
the utmost admiration and and never did
a does anything wrong and they are the
state of absolute perfection. It's not
only in my Christian and Muslim circles,
it's all religions, right? Judaism is
the only one that spins the majority,
probably, of all the for sure all the
prophets
and even the Torah itself
labeling the mistakes of the Jewish
people,
talking about the the downs and and how
imperf- imperfect the Jewish people are.
It's the ultimate story of grace. This
is the ultimate story of return and
restoration. It's the fact that God says
to the Jewish people, no matter how far
you go, I will always be there for you.
I will be a father, I will be a king,
and ultimately my promise is true that
I'm going to bring you back to your
soil.
And this becomes the way that God says.
So, I'm going to show you just from a
few different verses how God says to the
rest of the world
that I exist. So, it says in Ezekiel
36:23-24,
says, "I will sanctify my great name."
That means God is going to sanctify
comes from the word to to separate,
right?
The mikadesh, I'm going to make my name
holy, right?
That is, it's been desecrated amongst
the nations,
which you have desecrated among them.
Saying to you, oh Jewish people, you
when you were in those nations, uh you
you failed to to respect me in the way
that you should have. You you failed to
respect my honor my name. So God says,
"Listen, I'm going to do this once and
for all."
Then the nations, he says, "will know
that I am Hashem."
How How is that? How will the nations
know that I'm God? Not through science,
not through biology. This is how the
nations are going to know.
The word of the Lord Hashem Elohim
Hashem God
when I become sanctified through you,
Jewish people,
before their eyes.
That means that I'm going to be
separated by you. In the beginning,
God's upset that his name was not being
carried and honored in the right way
amongst the nations.
But then that very through the very same
people that desecrated the name of God,
he says that I'm going to flip it and
through you
sanctifying my name and making it holy,
I'm going to show the rest of the
nations
that I am God.
How? For I will take you
from among the nations and I will gather
you from all the lands and I will bring
you to your own soil.
The rebirth
of the nation of Israel
here, in Israel,
is the for sure fire way
that a person should know
that God is real and God is true.
Moving on, Ezekiel also says in 37:28,
he says, "Then the nations will know
that I am Hashem." How will they know?
Who sanctifies Israel? When my sanctuary
will be among them forever. Sanctuary
meaning obviously the the temple when
it's being rebuilt. Uh also bringing of
the Jewish people, bringing back and
restoring the the sanctuary. Isaiah
52:10,
Hashem God
has bared his holy arm
before the eyes of all the nations.
And all the ends of the earth will see
the salvation of our God.
So
once the nation start to see the
salvation of the Jewish people,
I mean, the returning of the exiles and
the and the and the and the gathering of
the Jewish people,
which is only becomes a spectacle
becomes something to see only after the
nations have seen the suffering already
of the Jewish people.
But once this redemption begins,
then ultimately
that is how the nations are going to
know that God is God. This is This is
why
the idea of a Jewish atheist doesn't
work because God's entire his business
card, his whole entire integrity of his
existence, he places on the Jew.
This is This is a phenomenon. This And
we're going to discuss more and more how
this how this is led to anti-Semitism.
So, I will make my holy name. This is
Ezekiel 39:7. I will make my holy name
known in the midst of my people Israel.
And I will no longer allow my holy name
to be profane.
I is really really does not like when
his name his sake is being profaned and
not being upheld. So, we see this
pattern. It says, "Then the nations will
know that I am Hashem, the holy one in
Israel."
The Jewish people
are going to be and are the indication
of the fact that there's a God. The
existence of the the Jewish people, the
thriving of the Jewish people, which is
a very very small percentage of people
actually in the world, but seems to be
on every single news station and always
on the radio or something. It's always
in some type of headlines. Nobody ever
thinks about this that this is the
biggest phenomenon in the world,
anti-Semitism. Why do so many people If
you look at this, I want you to think
about this. How you know that this is
purely divine. You can take
the far right and you can take the far
left, who can't seem to agree about
anything, right? One thing that they can
agree about is that they hate the Jews.
They're anti-Israel. They're you know,
there's some place if there's no place
at all where they see eye to eye, where
they begin to see eye to eye is their
hatred for the Jewish people.
So, some person who's not got all the
screws on right, for sure not
spiritually, goes and looks at look at
that you must be that bad that if you
know, if
extreme and that extreme both hate you
that you know, what does that say about
you?
The truth is
what does it say about the individual's
relationship with God, with the God of
truth?
Is it the God of truth, the God of
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
has put something out in the world. And
what I'm going to say is going to be a
very, very, very bold statement. I'll
say it now, I'll say it again at the
end, because I want you to live with
this.
We're going to see and we're already
starting to see that God is starting to
separate
the nations from those who
will follow him, who will believe in his
word, and and part of believing in his
word, a major part of believing in
Hashem's word, and believing in the
Torah, believing in the prophets and
biblical prophecy
is
which how one
either treats, looks at, or um
deals with
the Jewish people.
And this comes completely from the Bible
itself.
Not only does God say it to Abraham, he
also says that he says it twice. He says
it twice to the people. He says that I
will bless those who bless you, and I
will curse those who curse you.
So, he says it once to Abraham, and he
also says it to the whole entire nation.
So, there is a very, very clear
perspective that God is putting out into
the world that no matter how things may
look, no No how many conspiracy theories
you look up online, no matter how much
you are getting into the newspapers and
everything else, be very, very careful
about who and where you align yourself
when you are on this journey because God
is very clear about where he stands.
And not only is God very clear about it,
I had to go to this because one of the
most
profound and game-changing
um discoveries that I found along my
journey didn't even actually come from
the biblical narrative at all. It came
from Mark Twain. Mark Twain has a few
different essays that he did where he's
covered the Jews one in the article in
the paper and
I from my experience and from what I
know of Mark Twain, he wasn't like this
super like Jew lover. He's not He
doesn't have a whole lot of uh Jewish
content, I would say, out there um for
positive. But the few things that he did
write
are groundbreaking and I want to share
with some with you some of these things.
So, Mark Twain visited the Holy Land in
1867.
And he documented his journey in a book
The Innocents Abroad.
And his observations about the
desolation of the land of Israel were
stark and memorable. One of his famous
quotes describing the state of the land
at that time
is as follows.
He says, "A desolate country whose soil
is rich enough
but is given over
wholly to weeds.
A silent, mournful expanse. A desolation
is here that cannot even imagination
that not even imagination can grace with
the pomp of life and action.
We never saw a human being the whole
route. Right? So, free free Palestine,
right?
Mark Twain is writing, he didn't even
see a human
on the whole route.
As he was going up and down the roads,
he didn't see a human, let alone not
even a Palestinian.
Hardly a tree or shrub anywhere.
And he traversed the land. If anybody
knows about the his his journeys, he he
went throughout the land.
Even the olive tree and the cactus,
those fast friends of worthless soil,
had almost des- deserted the country.
This is Mark Twain's Innocents Abroad,
chapter 46. If a person wants to go
actually look it up. So, his description
matches the biblical narrative. What
does God say? What was one of the
punishments for the Jewish people? Says
not only will you be exiled, but you are
going to be sent far out of the land,
and the land itself will become
desolate.
There will be no growth, there'll be no
vegetation there in the land. People who
pass by would jeer and look and gnash
their teeth and say, "Oh, what what was
there before?" So, we know that the
Bible actually predicts that this will
actually happen. Mark Twain went there
in the 1800s, and he experienced it for
himself.
Twain also went on to say this. So, he
says in this famous quote about the
resilience of the Jewish people, it
appears in 1899 in this essay he he
wrote called the Concerning the Jews.
It was published in Harper's Magazine,
so here's the excerpt from that.
He says like this, and I need you to
listen to this. Jewish atheist, I want
you to hear this come from the Whoever,
I don't care who you are, but you have
to hear this. If the statistics are
right,
the Jews constitute but 1% of the human
race.
It suggests
a nebulous dim puff of a stardust lost
in the blaze of the Milky Way. It's very
poetic. It's hard to read some of this
stuff sometimes.
He says, "Properly, the Jew ought hardly
to be heard of.
But he is heard of." Sounds like
something we hear today.
Jews are 0.2% of the world's population,
but we cover a vast amount of news
stations, you know, all over the world,
not just here and in the United States,
but all over the world. It's
interesting. Shouldn't be heard of, but
he is heard of.
He has always been heard of, says Mark
Twain.
He is as prominent on the planet as any
other people. And his commercial
importance is extravagantly out of
proportion proportion to the smallest
smallness of his bulk.
His contributions to the world's list of
great names in literature, science, art,
music, finance, medicine, and abstruse
learning
are always are also way out of
proportion to the weakness of his
numbers.
Meaning that there's so much the Jewish
people has
has contributed to society, to humanity,
but they're very very small people, and
it does not add up.
Just another thing, not only
anti-Semitism, this is a divine thing,
the imprint that the Jewish people leave
on the world, which is for sure because
of the blessing that God gave through
Abraham.
He has made marvelous fight in this
world. And all the ages,
he's made a marvelous fight in the
world,
and in all the ages, he has done it with
his hands tied behind him.
He could be vain of himself, and he
could be excused for it.
The Egyptians, the Babylonians, the
Persians, they all rose,
filled the planet with sound and with
splendor, and then they faded to dream
stuff and passed away.
The Greeks, the Romans, they followed
and made a vast noise, and they are
gone.
Other peoples have sprung up and held
their torch for a time,
but then
it burned out.
And they sit in twilight now
or have vanished.
The Jew saw them all.
I mean, the Jewish people have lived
throughout civilization after
civilization. They saw all of these
nations.
In many cases, of course, from the
biblical narrative and shortly after, we
see that the Jews have had, you know,
not so great encounters with all these
nations. But the Jew has saw them all,
he says, and beat them all.
And is now
what he what he always was, exhibiting
no decadence,
no infirmities of age, not getting
older,
no weakening of his parts, no slowing of
his energies, no dulling of his alert
and aggressive mind.
All things are mortal, says Mark Twain.
But the Jew
not.
All other forces pass,
but he remains.
What is the secret? What is the secret
of his immortality?
So, these quotes came from Mark Twain.
And you see this. This matches up
completely with biblical prophecy of
what is said to be with the Jewish
people. And where we stand today, where
you see anti-Semitism and all of its
offshoots,
people have to deal with what the real
truth is.
People have an issue with God. And I
want to say this because I want to get
this out of the way. I know a lot of
people are going to say, "Oh, well, this
is like that whole Jewish my nation's
better than any other nation and we're
we're the best." It's not that at all.
The Bible tells us that God says to the
Jewish people that I chose you not
because you're the greatest. You're not
greater than all the nations, but rather
the least of all the nations. Now,
there's many different biblical
commentaries, even in the Torah world,
that tackle this. But I want to handle
this only on face value and I want you
to also see what's going on here and why
God perhaps chose the Jewish people or
what he let us know he chose the Jewish
people. Of course, one of the things was
Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob was so
sweet and so precious to God that he
says that I'm not going to allow
children from from these guys to go
without being a beloved people to me.
So, that's one thing. But, the actual
biblical narrative for sure tells us
that the Jewish people, because of the
least of the nations, they get to be the
chosen people. I want you to think about
it like this. If Goliath kills David, do
you have a story?
You don't have a story.
Goliath is, I don't know how many times
bigger than David was.
But, for sure, you have nothing to talk
about. There's nothing to write home
about because that's that would be the
obvious.
But, if David kills Goliath, you have a
story.
So, look at it this way. In the book of
Exodus,
God has to choose a savior to go and
save the Jewish people from out of the
midst of of of Egypt and to bring them
to the holy nation of Israel.
So, when God chooses a spokesperson to
go and speak on the behalf of the
nation, he goes and gets Moses that has
a list.
Why not Aaron, his brother, who was
obviously so profound that God sent him
in a lot of times to go actually talk to
me half because he he he helped him out.
So, why why not someone else? Why not a
awesome, powerful, charismatic speaker
to go and speak on the behalf of the
Jewish people? Why does it have to be
Moses?
So, Moses goes out, and he becomes the
one that speaks on the behalf, and he's
stuttering, he has a list, but he has a
Whatever the case is, however, you know,
the commentaries explain it.
But, Moses is not 100% He would not be
the charismatic speaker that you would
want to go be
the spokesman on the behalf of the
Jewish people.
So, when God says that I chose you
because you're the least, but not the
greatest. If you even if we go back to
King David, I wanted to highlight this
also, too.
He had seven older brothers that bigger,
stronger, that were in every way in the
outer appearance, they were the ones
that should have been the king. They
should have been considered to be the
king.
David was so
not even thought of. He wasn't even
brought out when Samuel comes to anoint
the king
at the house of Jesse, Yishai.
And he asked him to bring his sons, he
doesn't even bring David from the back.
Can't be him.
That didn't even think about him.
And all of a sudden
after Samuel tells him, "Listen, do you
have any more kids because it's none of
these guys?"
He anoints King David to be the king.
What God is trying to tell all of
humanity and why anti-Semitism is very,
very dangerous and how it's a phenomenon
and how a person could get swept up in
it and any person wants to save themself
and wants to be close to God and does
not and and this person does not want to
be on the wrong side of of the narrative
once it's all said and done.
You have to look at this biblical
principle that God is telling us. And it
happens over and over again. We see this
in Gideon fighting with 300 men. As I
mentioned in the last podcast, you'll
see this over and over this recurring
thing.
God chose the Jewish people
and allowed them to be the nation
because
God's might can show greater
to a nation that's the least of the
nation. A nation that's not the biggest,
the strongest, the fastest, the the
warriors of all the nations, you know,
the the simple accountants, doctors, you
know.
This is who God chooses in order to show
his whole entire might and to sanctify
his name.
Because if it's any other nation,
of course it was them.
Of course of course it was that
had to be that person. Of course had to
be this nation.
God says, "No."
He says, "I'm going to sanctify my name
through the Jewish people who is the
least of all the nations." And this is a
lesson, personal lesson that each and
every one of us can also take. But a
person has to understand that we don't
want to be on the wrong side because
it's very, very clear that God chose the
Jewish people. And people that have a
hate and disdain
if they are to ask themselves really
deeply where it comes from, people have
an issue with God.
They have an issue with God that the
fact that he would choose the Jewish
people. When the Jewish people, and I'm
saying this very openly because the
Jewish people have been the preservers
of the Torah and the book, the Bible,
which actually talks about the the the
ills of the Jewish people.
Jews we never we've never started any
conversation with the rest of the world
to say we are perfect. In fact, we are
probably the only nation, the Jewish
nation the only ones that have begin
that their whole entire existence, you
know, from talking about with the
biblical text to be able to tell the
rest of the world we are imperfect, but
we're all imperfect.
So nobody's been more critical to Jews
than Jews have.
I'm I'm just talking from the biblical
narrative throughout the Torah, all the
prophets.
The stories are there.
But what it leads to and what it has led
to is worldwide anti-Semitism, which is
a divine phenomenon
that the world takes on that they can't
really even put their finger on. Most of
it through peddling
conspiracy theories or whatever the case
is or so in some cases is a religion
that that hates Jews, whatever the case
is.
But this is something that has grown.
And ultimately for a person to be on the
right path, to have the proper trust in
God, you have to take the biblical
principle
that God shows his might
through that which is small,
that which people are not going to say,
"Oh, it's because he's great or she's
great or they're great." That's the
biblical principle that God is showing
to all of us through the Jewish people.
And because of that,
the world hates Jews.
Because not only are they angry with
God,
but they're angry
that even for themselves,
they can't redeem themselves. People
can't redeem themselves for their from
their own situations, and everybody
wants what we call the koach bi yadi. We
want to be able to have the power of my
right hand my hand. My hand, I'm going
to do it. I did this. I make this money.
I am the I'm the breadwinner. I'm the
person who's who's in charge. I'm I'm
ruling my life. I'm running this.
And the Jewish people represent, "I
can't.
Only God can."
And the world doesn't want to deal with
that part of itself.
So, the spiritual phenomenon
of anti-Semitism comes specifically from
the fact that I have to rely on God, and
the world doesn't like it.
And I'm telling you this is what's
behind it.
And we should do our best, with God's
help, to make sure that we're aligned
with God,
and that we see things in the way that
he wants us to see them.
We're living in a time right now where
biblical prophecy is unfolding before
our eyes. Wake up.
I want to read with you
from the book of Ezekiel.
One of the last things that I want to
share with you because I think it's
very, very important. It's very
powerful.
If you look at the book of Ezekiel in
36th chapter, starting from verse 7,
there's a prophecy that happens in the
land of Israel. And this is very
important. This is not the space for it,
but I I encourage anybody to look into
this. You can look at agriculture,
what's happened in in Israel over the
last, I don't know, 100 years or so, 70
years, whatever the case is. And you can
even look in other places. There are
places that in in terms of biblical
Israel, it's part of Jordan, Syria, um
Lebanon, all these other places. And you
can even see these from satellite map,
look at it, and you are going to be
blown away at what has taken place.
We were already told from God that the
punishment would be,
so to speak, is that the land will
become barren.
But the restoration, we're told now here
in Ezekiel 36, beginning of verse 7,
that the restoration, what is going to
be the sign of the of the last and final
days. How do we know even now that we're
we're all everybody's so talking about
it right now that we are in the end
times? What How do we know? How can we
be positive? So says right here in the
book of Ezekiel 36:7.
Yes, prophesy about the land of Israel,
he tells Ezekiel.
And say to the mountains and the hills,
to the watercourses and to the valleys,
thus says the sovereign God, behold, I
declare my blazing wrath because you
have suffered the taunting of the
nations.
Thus says the sovereign God,
I hereby swear
that the nations that surround you shall
in turn suffer their disgrace.
So this is another indication that we
know that the in the final
um
the final era of of humanity before the
coming of Messiah, the redemption, the
final redemption, that the nation of
Israel will be surrounded by its
enemies. The land will be surrounded by
it.
It says, but you, oh mountain of Israel,
this is verse 8,
shall yield your produce and bear your
fruit for my Israel. For their return is
near.
Now, we're standing at a time right now
where the majority of the the the I
wouldn't say the majority of Jews,
that's not the right number. The highest
population of Jewish people in one place
is now inside of Israel.
Not that there's 50% but that's the
right way to say it actually is that the
the the largest concentration of Jews
all in one uh particular country is now
in Israel, which is a major major shift.
This is uh these numbers are are
amazing.
It says in verse 9, "For I will care for
you.
And I will turn to you, and you shall be
tilled and sown." That means the land is
going to start being tilled, and it's
going to be sown, and I will settle a
large population on you.
And the whole house of Israel, the towns
should be resettled.
And the ruined sites rebuilt.
I will multiply human and animal upon
you.
And they shall increase and be fertile.
And I will resettle you as you were
formerly.
And I will make you more prosperous than
you were at first.
And you shall know that I am God.
The writing is on the wall.
Right now is the time for a person to
choose
where you stand. Where you stand with
God, where you stand with God's people,
where you stand with God's with God's
word, his his Torah, his revelation into
the world to humanity.
But only thing I would say is choose
wisely. Because how anti-Semitism is
beyond
just racism or bigotry or uh you know,
someone's political agenda.
Anti-Semitism
does will
and can ultimately affect you for all of
eternity.
Thanks for joining me. Hey, what's going
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