| Time | Text |
|---|---|
|
Blame Game with North Korea
00:02:05
|
|
| People blame everything on the Jews. | |
| Just like our president. | |
| You know, they blame everything on the president, even though they're blaming our fight with North Korea. | |
| Right. | |
| We did not start a war. | |
| Well, they're showing news clips of the past administrations talking to North Korea, going all the way back to Clinton. | |
| That's right. | |
| So you've got Clinton and you've got Bush and you've got Obama all talking to North Korea, and our president speaks directly to North Korea in candor, and now it's his fault. | |
| And some of our presidents gave billions of dollars to North Korea, and what good did it do? | |
| Well, that's why they're behaving the way they are now. | |
| They want more. | |
| On May 15th, 1967, it says in your book, I'm quoting your book. | |
| Egypt to the south, Syria to the north, Jordan to the east, along with Lebanon and Iraq, joined forces to destroy Israel as a nation. | |
| An estimated 465,000 Arab troops with 2,800 tanks and 800 aircraft were committed to putting an end to Israel. | |
| This little state, it seemed like there's no possibility they could win this war. | |
| They had more men in uniform almost than Israel had in citizens. | |
| And Israel's outlook during the six days of the Six-Day War, they had already begun to distribute body bags to city parks. | |
| They had already begun to prepare for mass casualty situations. | |
| Israel believed that these nations were going to literally do what they said and push them into the Mediterranean. | |
| It was hopeless, really, in the flesh. | |
| It was hopeless. | |
| And yet, rather than suffer annihilation, in six days, the armies that had attacked Israel called Israel and asked them to stop the fighting. | |
|
Six Days to Jerusalem
00:02:21
|
|
| Now think about this. | |
| They didn't start the fight, but they're asked to stop the fight in six days because the other nations are concerned that they're going to give up and lose too much more territory and too much more land. | |
| Only God can do this. | |
| And what did they win? | |
| What did the Jews then win in six days? | |
| At the end of the six days, they finally were in possession of the old city of Jerusalem. | |
| They suddenly had what the book of Luke said, that the day of the Gentiles would be over and that the city of God was going to return to the hands of Israel and that once it did, it would never leave. | |
| And so it's one of those things that, you know, as we talk about headlines and we hear people talk about a two-state solution and what if this in Israel and what if that in Jerusalem, you look at the word of God and say, no, I'm sorry, based on 1967, that's not going to change. | |
| And so it gives you an understanding of God's preeminence over the affairs of men. | |
| You know, I mean, I have spoken with many people who said that the outcome of this last election really kind of, you know, slows things down prophetically. | |
| No, it doesn't. | |
| God's timepiece is not measured by our wristwatch, and he's not waiting on the polls to decide what he's going to do when. | |
| If in reality, the last election with the election of President Donald Trump, it gave the Bible-believing body of Christ in the United States a work permit. | |
| It gave us permission to continue to do what God commissioned us to do in sharing the gospel. | |
| It didn't stop or slow down or shorten the last days. | |
| It didn't stop or slow down or hasten anything. | |
| What it did was give us permission to continue to fulfill the great commission until he arrives. | |
| And we have to be honoring to that call rather than debating the days that we're living in. | |
| We see with the birth of Israel, we see with the nation of Israel taking possession of the city of Jerusalem, exactly what God said would happen, come to pass, and knowing these things, we're obligated then to continue to share this gospel. | |
| That's right. | |