Christians And Jews Join Together To Read Isaiah’s Prophecies — But No Mention Of Christ The Messiah

For the first time since its international launch in 2019, Israelis will join the Nationwide Bible Reading Marathon – on July 14 at 7:14 a.m. local time — to read the Book of Isaiah, which foretold the coming of Christ, the promised messiah of Israel, but that inconvenient subject isn’t mentioned:

Participants will each read a chapter from the Book of Isaiah, the main character who prophesied the destruction of Babylon and the return of the Jewish people to Israel.

“Reading the Bible is a no-brainer,” said Jonathan Feldstein, who arranged for Israel to take part in the reading marathon through his Genesis 123 Foundation, which works to build bridges between Christians and Jews. “It’s the shared scripture that serves as a foundation of so many other relations between Jews and Christians.”

He said that “the significance of Israel participating cannot be understated. Reading the Bible is especially fitting in the land about which it was written. Reading Isaiah in Israel, as Jews and Christians together, is even more significant as he prophesied about the Jewish people in their land, which is referenced in 2 Chronicles 7:14, the catalyst and time source for this initiative. It is analogous to lighting the Olympic torch in the place where fire was created.”

In Israel, Isaiah will be read in Hebrew, English and Arabic, as well as Russian, Amharic, French, Spanish and Portuguese, among other languages.

The Nationwide Bible Marathon was founded in Iowa by Dianne Bentley in 2018. The state’s 99 counties would take part in the initiative by dividing up the more than 1,000 chapters of the Torah and Christian Bible on July 14 at 7:14 a.m. Central time – about 12 chapters per county.

“We began reading in Northwest Iowa with Genesis and ended in Southeast Iowa with Revelation,” Bentley said. “Within 1 ½ to 2 hours the word of God had been proclaimed over the entire state of Iowa from the 99 Iowa county courthouse lawns.”

As Feldstein explained, the foundation for the initiative is 2 Chronicles 7:14: “If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and heal their land.” The land referred to in the Bible verse is the Land of Israel.

In 2019, Bentley decided to go global and expanded from Iowa to 14 other nations. In 2020, some 57 nations participated. This year, 72 nations, in addition to Israel, are taking part. Bentley said that the initiative is mostly shared via word of mouth: “It is a grassroots effort.”

“While there’s an unprecedented and increasing historical trend for Jews and Christians to connect and partner in areas such as support for Israel, combating antisemitism and other social issues of common interest, it’s not every day that Jews and Christians unite in prayer, or something as basic as reading the Bible together,” Feldstein said.

He added that the participation is even more significant this year in light of recent surveys that show an increasing trend among young Jews and Christians to turn away from religion and the State of Israel. “That Jews and Christians are coming together in this most fundamental Biblical fellowship is precedent-setting, and sets a model for young people to connect and re-engage,” Feldstein said.

“Among the areas that Jews and Christians have come together for so many years is in support of Israel,” he said. “This is also waning as a result of the trend of millennials to turn away from traditional Biblical values. The restoration of these values, even through something as mundane as reading the Bible, can be a redemptive answer to many prayers.”

When Jews and Christians get together to discuss the Bible, it’s always a one-way street — Christians accommodate the Jews, never the other way around.

And this article is proof of that — it intentionally avoids mentioning that Isaiah prophesied the coming of Jesus Christ as the promised messiah of Israel — exactly as the disciples discuss in Act 8.

In fact, the Book of Isaiah so accurately foretold the coming of Christ that many biblical scholars believed it to be a Christian forgery that was inserted into the Old Testament by the early church.

But when the Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered — and included Isaiah — there was no denying its authenticity — but that hasn’t stopped the Jews from trying to prove that Isaiah did not prophesy the coming of Christ.

So instead the article tries to claim that Isaiah somehow prophesied the “return of the Jewish people” to the land of Israel — which, again, is not true.

The Tribe of Judah returned to Israel from their captivity in Babylon — not the “Jewish people” — today’s “Jewish people” are not the Tribe of Judah, nor are they legitimate living descendants of Judah.

If today’s Jews are not real Hebrews, then they have no biblical claim to any land in the Middle East — or anywhere else for that matter.

Jews were able to move to Palestine and establish a Jewish ethno-state not because of some biblical mandate but rather because they had the economic and political power to do so — riding a wave of public sympathy based on false propaganda about an alleged “Holocaust” at the hands of “Nazis” and their “collaborators.”

And as far as Christians believing that the “Jews” have to return to the land of Israel before Jesus Christ can return, that notion is nowhere in the Bible either — which is why the wealthy Jew, Samuel Untermeyer financed the writing of the Scofield Bible — to brainwash Christians into supporting the Zionist land grab.




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