14-7 Summary Of The History Of Israel
ABRAHAM was called out of Ur of the Chaldees; the first Jew. God made
promises to him regarding the land of Canaan, and his seed. He died not
having received these promises.
ISAAC. Abraham was prepared to offer his son Isaac as a sacrifice. Because
Abraham was faithful, God confirmed His promise to Abraham by an oath.
Isaac's willingness to die in obedience to his father's command is a type
of Christ. The promises were renewed to Isaac (Gen.26:3-5)
JACOB was Isaac's son. The promises were repeated to him too. He had
12 sons - Reuben was the eldest, Benjamin the youngest. Levi was the one
from whom the priests descended. Joseph was the favourite.
JOSEPH . As a lad he had two dreams which depicted him as the ruler over
his brethren. They became jealous, and sold him as a slave into Egypt.
There he became a ruler, and organized the conservation of corn to be
used during seven years of famine which afflicted the region. During this
time, Jacob and his sons came to live with Joseph in Egypt. They and their
descendants lived in Goshen, part of Egypt. A later Pharaoh persecuted
the people of Israel, making them slaves.
MOSES was born at this time; he was hidden in bulrushes as a baby, and
then found by Pharaoh's daughter and adopted by her. While a young man,
he killed an Egyptian who was beating an Israelite. Moses then fled into
Midian, where he worked for 40 years as a shepherd with Jethro. God then
appeared to him in a burning bush. He was told to go to Pharaoh and demand
deliverance for Israel. He did miraculous signs to prove that he was really
sent from God. However, Pharaoh would not let Israel go, therefore ten
plagues were sent upon Egypt, e.g. frogs, darkness, hail, and finally
the killing of the firstborn males. The Israelites had to kill a lamb
and sprinkle the blood on the door of their houses. This pointed forward
to how the blood of Jesus can save us from death. This feast became known
as the Passover.
EXODUS. The Israelites were at last allowed to leave Egypt. They travelled
guided by God's Angel in a pillar of cloud in the daytime, and a pillar
of fire by night. Pharaoh's army pursued them up to the Red Sea. The waters
opened miraculously to let the people go through, and then the waters
returned to drown the Egyptians. Israel then travelled through the wilderness
towards the promised land of Canaan. God gave them water to drink from
a rock, and bread in the form of manna was provided every morning. When
they reached the mountain of Sinai, God gave them the ten commandments
and the Law of Moses. They were then constituted God's Kingdom. They were
commanded to make a special tent, called a tabernacle, in which God could
be worshipped. They were given a High Priest and priests who could offer
their sacrifices to God. All the elements of the tabernacle and priesthood
pointed forward to Jesus.
THE PROMISED LAND was eventually approached. 12 spies were sent out,
ten of whom returned saying that it was too difficult to possess the land
of Canaan. The other two spies, Joshua and Caleb, said the truth - that
the land could be possessed by them, if they had faith in God's promises.
Because the people shared the attitude of the ten spies, Israel had to
wander in the wilderness for 40 years until all those who were over 20
when they left Egypt were dead.
JOSHUA was Moses' successor, and led Israel into the land of Canaan.
The first city to be taken was Jericho, where Rahab lived, and then Ai.
Once they were established in the land, they were ruled intermittently
by JUDGES, although God was their real king. These included men like Gideon,
Jephthah and Samson. They all delivered Israel from their enemies, when
they repented of sinning against God. The history of Israel is full of
examples of Israel being disobedient to God, being punished by invasions
from neighbouring nations, repenting of their sins and God delivering
them - and then sinning again. The last judge was Samuel. In his time,
the people of Israel rejected God as their King by asking for a human
king, like the nations around them.
THE KINGS. Their first king was Saul who, although starting well, turned
out to be a wicked man, who was disobedient to God's commandments, and
persecuted David. After his death, David became the next king, and was
one of Israel's best. God made great promises to him. After him came his
son Solomon who, after a good start, was turned away from the true faith
by his many wives who he had taken from the surrounding nations. After
his death the kingdom split into two - ten tribes formed the kingdom of
Israel, initially under Jeroboam; the other two tribes, Judah and Benjamin,
formed the kingdom of Judah, initially under Rehoboam, Solomon's son.
The Kingdom of Israel (the ten tribes) had no good kings. They were continually
rebellious against God. He sent them many prophets to plead with them
to repent, but they would not. Therefore the Assyrians invaded them, and
took them away into captivity. They were scattered throughout the world.
The Kingdom of Judah (the 2 tribes) had a few good kings (e.g. Asa, Hezekiah),
but they, too, were generally disobedient to God. The Babylonians were
therefore sent to invade them, and took them into captivity in Babylon
for 70 years. They never again had a king. After 70 years, some returned
to the land of Israel under the leadership of Ezra, Nehemiah, Joshua (the
High Priest at the time) and Zerubbabel the Governor. They were ruled
over first by Persia, then by Greece, and finally by Rome. They were under
Rome when Jesus was born. As a result of the Jews rejecting him, God sent
the Romans to destroy Jerusalem in AD70, and eventually all Jews were
expelled from the land of Israel.
In recent years, the Jews have started to return to the land, in partial
fulfilment of the Old Testament prophecies. The revival of the State of
Israel is a sure sign that soon Jesus will return to re-establish the
Kingdom of Israel as the Kingdom of God.
|