Editor's note: Joseph Farah, along with "The Harbinger" author Jonathan Cahn, is leading a tour of 400 in Israel through Nov. 17. All of his columns during this period will focus on the big issues facing Israel – along with some shocking facts you won't find anywhere else.
Here I am in Israel, and what am I thinking about?
Climate change.
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Why climate change?
For 1,800 years it seemed unlikely that Israel would ever be reborn as the Bible predicted. Many Christians and Jews began to interpret the many specific prophecies about Israel making a comeback in allegorical terms.
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No nation in history had ever been regathered after such a lengthy period. Even the Hebrew language was lost in that time.
Meanwhile, the Promised Land became a barren wasteland – a desert no man could master.
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Today, Israel is back, and, again, just as the Bible promised, the deserts are blooming.
Have you ever wondered why the Holy Land became a wasteland during the 1,800-year dispersion of the Jews that lasted until they returned in significant numbers beginning in the early 20th century?
Have you ever wondered why Mark Twain was so disappointed at what he found in his travels through the area in the 19th century?
Have you ever wondered why, during that period of nearly two millennia, no other people successfully and permanently settled this land that is so much in dispute today?
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It was all a fulfillment of prophecy. Little did Mark Twain know when he wrote about his trip to the Holy Land that he was fulfilling prophecy, but he was.
1 Kings 9:6-8 explains it all: "But if ye shall at all turn from following me, ye or your children, and will not keep my commandments and my statutes which I have set before you, but go and serve other gods, and worship them: Then will I cut off Israel out of the land which I have given them; and this house, which I have hallowed for my name, will I cast out of my sight; and Israel shall be a proverb and a byword among all people: And at this house, which is high, every one that passeth by it shall be astonished, and shall hiss; and they shall say, Why hath the Lord done thus unto this land, and to this house?"
It wasn't just the children of Israel who suffered as a result of their disobedience and apostasy. So did the land itself.
In his book, "Prophecies for the Era of Muslim Terror," Rabbi Menachem Kohen points out the land suffered an unprecedented, severe and inexplicable (by anything other than supernatural explanations) drought that lasted from the first century until the 20th – a period of 1,800 years coinciding with the forced dispersion of the Jews.
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Kohen sees this as a miraculous fulfillment of prophecy found in the book of Deuteronomy – especially chapter 28:23-24: "And thy heaven that is over thy head shall be brass, and the earth that is under thee shall be iron. The LORD shall make the rain of thy land powder and dust: from heaven shall it come down upon thee, until thou be destroyed."
The climate in Israel dramatically changed during this 1,800-period – way before Al Gore discovered "global warming."
Before the Jews entered Canaan, it was described in the Bible as a land flowing with milk and honey. If you read what Israel's climate and natural landscape was like from the time Joshua crossed the Jordan right up until the time of Jesus, it sounds like a heavily forested land. There were amazing crops raised by the people who inhabited the land when the Jews arrived.
Once I wondered what happened to Israel to turn it into the dusty, arid land it was when the Jews came back in the 20th century. Until I read that prophecy in Deuteronomy, brought to my attention by Rabbi Kohen, I had no clue.
For 1,800 years, it hardly ever rained in Israel. This was the barren land discovered by Mark Twain. So-called "Palestine" was a wasteland – nobody lived there. There was no indigenous Arab population to speak of. It only came after the Jews came back.
Beginning in A.D. 70 and lasting until the early 1900s – about 660,000 days – no rain.
I decided to check this out as best I could and examined the rainfall data for 150 years in Israel beginning in the early 1800s and leading up to the 1960s. What I found was astonishing – increasing rainfall almost every single year – with the heaviest rainfall coming in and around 1948 and 1967. Is this just a coincidence?
I'll be quite honest with you: I don't think so.
Nor do I think Israel can continue today to make bad stewardship decisions regarding the land bequeathed to the Jews by God without consequences – serious consequences.
And that's exactly what Israel is doing today – yielding to global pressure to trade "land for peace." It won't work. In fact, the prophet Daniel (Daniel 11:39) warns that this will eventually happen in the last days – and bring about the final conflagration known as "Armageddon."
That's why I believe in climate change. But it's not the imaginary kind caused by carbon dioxide. It's caused by the Creator of carbon dioxide – and everything else.
He's still got a plan for this land of Israel.
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