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Behold Israel
11 hrs ·

This morning, Ethiopian Airlines brand new Boeing 737 MAX crashed on the way to Kenya with 157 people on board, two of which were Israelis.
My daughter, Maayan, returned from a mission trip to Kenya, Africa, on this very aircraft the night before. It could have been a different morning for us as a family had this plane crashed a day earlier.
Maayan told us this morning that the night before their flight, a strong Kenyan believer had a vision of a burning plane in the skies and prayed hard for their safety! Prayer works! We as a family want to thank the thousands of people that are praying for us daily. The Lord has protected my daughter and her friends from this crash and we are beyond grateful!
“...What shall I render to the Lord
For all His benefits toward me?
I will take up the cup of salvation,
And call upon the name of the Lord...”
Psalm 116:12-13
1 Comment
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7 posted on 03/10/2019 8:21:15 PM PDT by firebrand
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This appeared on the Behold Israel Facebook page, contributed by a member, and was attributed to Axios.com, but when I went to that site, I didn’t find this. Found something similar, so maybe the story was edited later.


Ahead of the launch of President Trump’s Israeli-Palestinian peace plan, the White House has been engaging with Evangelical leaders to reassure them about the plan.

Why it matters: Evangelicals are a crucial part of Trump’s political base and senior officials in his administration, like Vice President Pence and Secretary of State Pompeo, are Evangelicals. Most U.S. Evangelicals are strong supporters of Israel, and many Evangelical leaders are stanch allies of Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu.

On Thursday a group of Evangelical leaders arrived at the White House for a briefing with Trump’s Middle East envoy Jason Greenblatt.

Among those present were Pastor John Hagee, Pastor Jentezen Franklin, Pastor Paula White and others. Although the meeting was off-the-record many of the attendees tweeted about it.
A source who attended the meeting said that several of the Evangelical leaders raised concerns about the peace plan, especially about the possibility it will give the Palestinians a capital in parts of East Jerusalem.

“They didn’t give many details about the plan but they wanted to hear concerns and red lines and answer questions the Evangelical leaders had,” the source said.
The source added that Greenblatt told the group the peace plan will be fair and can benefit both sides — but both will have to make compromises. The White House declined to comment on this account.
Joel Rosenberg, an author who heads an evangelical foundation and has attended the meetings, refused to give any details of their content.

Rosenberg, who is also a personal friend of Pence and Pompeo, says he told the other Evangelical leaders in the meetings that Palestinian President Abbas is never going to make a deal, so there is no need to be too worried that Jerusalem is going to be sacrificed.

Rosenberg said he stressed to the other Evangelical leaders: “We need to allow the President freedom of movement and latitude to present a plan that would allow those Arab states which are more willing than ever to make peace with Israel to move forward. We need to give the Arab States the ability to support this. If the Saudis, the Egyptian and others can say that this plan is credible it will open the door for, after the Palestinians say no, to talk about how to move forward.



8 posted on 03/10/2019 10:54:46 PM PDT by firebrand
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