An excellent article by Alister Heath, a British journalist for the Daily Telegraph:
They’ll point to politics, settlements,
borders, and wars. But scratch beneath the outrage, and you’ll find something
deeper. A discomfort not with what Israel does, but with what Israel is.
A nation this small should not be this
strong. Period.
And still, they thrive like there’s no
tomorrow.
In military. In medicine. In security. In
technology. In agriculture. In intelligence. In morality. In sheer, unbreakable
will.
They turn desert into farmland.
They make water from air.
They intercept rockets in mid-air.
They rescue hostages under the nose of the
world’s worst regimes.
They survive wars that were supposed to wipe
them out, and win.
They assume it must be cheating.
It must be American aid.
It must be foreign lobbying.
It must be oppression.
It must be theft.
It must be some dark trick that gave the Jews
this kind of power.
It must be blackmail.
Because heaven forbid it’s something else.
Heaven forbid it’s real.
Heaven forbid it’s earned.
Or worse, destined.
There is no rational path from gas chambers
to global influence.
And there is no historical precedent for
surviving the Babylonians, the Romans, the Crusaders, the Inquisition, the
pogroms, and the Holocaust, and still showing up to work on Monday in Tel Aviv.
Unless you believe in something beyond the
math.
This is what drives the world crazy. Because
if Israel is real, if this improbable, ancient, hated nation is somehow still
chosen, protected, and thriving.
Maybe God isn’t a myth after all.
Maybe He’s still in the story.
Maybe history isn’t random.
Maybe evil doesn’t get the last word.
Maybe the Jews are not just a people… but a
testimony.
Because once you admit that Israel’s survival
isn’t just impressive, but divine, everything changes. Your moral compass has
to reset. Your assumptions about history, power, and justice collapse. You
realize you’re not watching the end of an empire. You’re witnessing the
beginning of something eternal.
So they deny it.
They smear it.
And rage against it.
Because it’s easier to call a miracle
“cheating” than to face the possibility that God keeps His promises and He’s
keeping them still.
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