People of Faith in the Promised Land

By: Sondra Baras

Tuesday April 3, 2018

The CFOIC Heartland Annual Israel Tour has just gone home after spending at least a week and for some, 11 days, touring Israel.  (We structured our tour differently this year — a basic 7 day tour and a 4 day add-on which enabled many more people to join us this  time.)  It was a great experience for everyone who participated and that included many first-timers.  I never tire of meeting people who are experiencing Israel for the first time — the joy on their faces, the shine in their eyes as they realize they are walking in that special land of the Bible, the land that G-d gave to the People of Israel.  I love seeing the Bible come alive for them!

I spent time with the group although it was my colleague Kim Troup, Director of our US office that was with them the entire time.  I loved taking them to my favorite viewing point in Israel — the 3 Seas Outlook.  And I know I have taken many of you there over the years.  From that mountain, you have a spectacular view of the Oak of Moreh, of Mt. Ebal and Mt. Gerizim, of the Mountains of Gilead in modern-day Jordan, of the Jordan Valley and the Plains of Moab.  There spread out before you, the relationship between the G-d of Israel, the people of Israel and the Land of Israel comes alive.  There we can see and feel the eternity of G-d’s word and the truth of His promises.

As we celebrate the holiday of Passover, this message rings truer than ever.  Enslaved in Egypt, the Children of Israel did not necessarily have hope that they would be redeemed.  Albeit, G-d had revealed His plan to Abraham (Genesis 15:13-16), but it is not clear that the Children of Israel, hundreds of years later, remembered that plan.

But ever since the Exodus from Egypt, we have known that G-d will keep his word and we have worked hard to ensure that every generation remembers the promise.  The crowning theme of the Seder is “You shall tell your children on that day” (Exodus 13:8), a message repeated often in the Bible with respect to the Exodus from Egypt.  And remember and tell we did.  That is what the Seder is all about.  At the beginning of the Seder the children ask the four questions, beginning at an age when they don’t even understand the meaning of the words.  But the message is clear — it is the duty of our children to ask and it is the duty of the parents to tell, to teach and to remember.  The entire Seder is an educational experience, not only geared to the children.  The adults read the texts and discuss them, divining new meanings each year, based on our recent experiences.

There is a paragraph in the seder that reads as follows: “In each generation there are enemies who try to destroy us and G-d saves us from their hands.” This line brings with it so many associations.  It was composed centuries after the Exodus and related to the experiences of those who wrote it — probably Jews in Israel suffering from the persecutions of the Roman Empire. But throughout the ages, Jews found comfort in that line, regardless of the oppressor of the age.

In my lifetime, it was the memory of the Holocaust that stood out strongest.  I remember my grandfather pausing at that line, remembering his entire family who had been butchered by the Nazis, thanking G-d for saving him, the lone survivor of a magnificent family.  And for years, we did our seder together with dear friends in the community.  Our friend would always remember the Nazis at that point as well, remembering the suffering and good fortune of his parents as they escaped the Holocaust, while so many others were not so fortunate.

Whether it was the Romans, the Byzantines, the Muslims, the Poles, the Germans, the British, the Spanish, the Yemenites — whichever nation was persecuting us that year, we held strong to our belief that G-d would save us.   And that is the message that begins at the 3 Seas Outlook, continues through to the Passover Seder and accompanies the Jewish people throughout our history.  It is the message that preserved us as a nation, and kept us from assimilating.  We knew that we had a future as a nation and we held on to that belief.  We knew that one day G-d would gather us up from the nations and bring us back to our land.  “If your outcasts will be at the ends of the earth, from there the lord your G-d will gather you and from there He will take you.  And the Lord your G-d will bring you to the land that your fathers inherited and you will prosper and multiply even more than your fathers” (Deuteronomy 30:4-5).

As Christians, you share the Bible with us, but you have not shared our experiences as a nation. But it is so moving to me to meet Christians who want to understand those experiences better, who are eager to meet Jews, face to face, and hear the telling of the Exodus directly from us.  For the modern –day Exodus from Exile to the Land of Israel is truly the story of Modern-Day Israel. It is the story that can be told by Jews of faith, on the basis of faith and it is this story that never fails to grab Christians, for you too are people of faith.

I am grateful for all the opportunities you have given me to meet you and teach you about our Jewish experiences, whether in your own community or in Israel.  I want to invite you to come to Israel and give me the opportunity to meet you and teach you, at the Three-Seas Outlook or anywhere else in Israel.  And if you can’t make it here, perhaps your church or community would like to experience this teaching.  It is a teaching that every person of faith  needs to hear.

Related News

An Eye on Zion: Kochav Yaakov

Just over a century later, a group of devout pioneers sharing the same love and passion for the Land of Israel, founded a new community just north of Jerusalem. Drawing their inspiration from Rabbi Yaakov Abuhatzeira, they named it “Abir Yaakov,” the same venerated title that was used to address the late Rabbi during his life. Subsequently renamed “Kochav Yaakov,” (“Star of Jacob”), the community has absorbed many Jews who, like Rabbi Abuhatzeira, left their respective countries of birth to live in the Land of Israel.

Mar 3, 2025

The Evil That Surrounds Us

As we watched the return of what we thought were the bodies of four beautiful Israelis, we wept with the families and with all of Israel. Shiri Bibas and her two gorgeous red-headed children, Kfir and Ariel — their story and their pictures traveled the world and became the symbol of the evil and cruelty of the Hamas terrorists.

Feb 25, 2025

An Eye on Zion: Kiryat Arba

On April 4, 1968, Rabbi Moshe and Miriam Levinger, a visionary couple, registered themselves and dozens of others to stay at Hebron’s Park Hotel. Just ten months after the People of Israel liberated Hebron and the rest of the Biblical Heartland during the Six Day War in 1967, this dedicated group excitedly planned to hold the city’s first Passover Seder in several decades.

Feb 17, 2025

The Price We Pay for Caring

What an emotional roller-coaster! Last Sunday and again this past Saturday, we waited with baited breath to see which hostages would be released and what they would look like. It had been more than a year since the last hostage release, and no one knew what their condition would be.

Jan 28, 2025

A Week in Washington D.C.

The experience of participating in what could be one of the most pivotal moments for Judea and Samaria left an indelible mark on me. I want to share with you, my friends, the highlights of this extraordinary journey.

Jan 23, 2025

An Eye on Zion: Yakir

The pioneers named the nascent community “Yakir,” meaning “precious,” the precise Hebrew word used by God to describe His “son,” Ephraim (Jeremiah 31:19).

Jan 13, 2025

Life in a Villa in a Jungle

It is hard to believe that another year has gone by—another year of seemingly unending war, tragedy, loss. There are still 100 hostages being held by Hamas in Gaza. While at least 36 have been murdered, it is not clear how many of the remaining 64 are still alive.

Dec 31, 2024

An Eye on Zion: Avigayil

Drawing their inspiration from the Biblical figure Avigayil (Abigail), Elisha and his friends decided to establish a new community in the southern Hebron Hills. They parked an old bus on a plot of land facing Maon, the ancient Biblical site where Avigayil lived.

Dec 9, 2024

Israel Welcomes Trump

What an astounding result in the US elections! While this regime change will have significant effect on many issues in the US, as an Israeli, I want to share with you my thoughts, which reflect the thoughts of so many in Israel, on how this change will affect Israel.

Nov 19, 2024

An Eye on Zion: Bet Hagai

On Friday evening of May 2, 1980, a group of students from Nir Yeshiva, located on the outskirts of the Biblical city of Hebron, excitedly headed to the Cave of Machpelah. There, they joyfully welcomed in the Sabbath with uplifting prayers.
That evening, however, terrorists threw grenades and fired bullets in the direction of the students, murdering three of them.

Nov 11, 2024