![]() |
| Scroll of Esther |
Ritter's Rants & Rumblings
I write to think. I speak my mind in order to help organize my thoughts. Take it or leave it. (I make no claim to any the graphics on this blog.)
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
TODAY IS PURIM. SO WHAT?
Monday, March 2, 2026
PLAY ON A KINGLY NAME
This whole reflection began with a timely reminder.
Over the weekend a friend and I flew out of town for a conference on how to study the Scriptures. The teacher walked us through tools and patterns I’ve worked with for years, but hearing them freshly laid out still sharpened my attention.
The next day, that same friend was eager to make use of what he’d learned. In conversation he mentioned that his morning Bible reading had been in Numbers, in the story of the daughters of Zelophehad, and he focused on one figure called Milcah. He said her name just came off the page at him. It nagged at him because he was sure he’d seen a name like that somewhere else in Scripture, but he couldn’t quite place it.
In that moment, something clicked.
I’ve thought a lot about that scene in the garden where Peter cuts off the servant’s ear. I’ve always sensed it was a message to the king, some kind of prophetic gesture aimed beyond the surface of the narrative, but I never quite knew what that message was. As my friend spoke about Milcah, with those study tools freshly in mind, the connection suddenly came into focus.
There was the bridge I’d been looking for all along—the link between Milcah and the servant in the Garden: Malchus. The story of Peter’s sword and the servant’s ear snapped into place in a new way, and the “message to the king” began to take shape.
Play on a Kingly Name
Both Milcah (מִלְכָּה) and Malchus share the same Semitic root (מֶלֶך) as melech, “king.” Milcah is the feminine form from that same root, meaning “queen” or “ruler.”
Malchus: The King’s Servant and the Cut-Off Ear
Malchus enters the Gospel story almost as a footnote. He is the servant of the high priest, part of the arresting party that comes for Jesus under cover of darkness. He is a “king’s man” of sorts—embedded in the religious establishment, close to the center of power, the kind of servant who quite literally serves as the ear of the high priest.
Peter does what zealous hearts always think is necessary in moments like this. He reaches for the sword. To Peter, this is covenant loyalty. This is how you defends the Messiah. One slash, and Malchus’ right ear is on the ground.It is an ugly picture of religious zeal in the flesh: sincere, misdirected, and ultimately destructive. Peter is willing to die for Jesus, but in his own way. He is ready to shed blood to keep the kingdom on track with his expectations of how a Jewish Messiah should be defended.
I’m also struck by how much the scenes themselves resemble each other. In both cases I picture a crowd, a public moment thick with tension, and leadership under pressure. The daughters of Zelophehad stand before Moses, the priest, the chiefs, and the whole congregation with a hard question about inheritance hanging in the air. In the garden, a crowd sent from the chief priests and elders presses in on Jesus with swords and clubs as Peter lashes out and Malchus is struck. In both settings, the question is the same: will those in charge truly hear what God is doing in front of everyone?
Jesus rebukes Peter: “Put your sword back.” The kingdom will not advance by the same tools the world uses. Then Jesus does something almost shockingly gentle. He reaches out and heals the ear of the man who has come to help arrest him. The servant of the high priest—the ear of the high priestly system, we might say—is restored by the one that system is trying to crush.
I’ve always felt that this is a message to the king. But what precisely is being said?
At the simplest level, the scene is a rebuke of violent zeal. You cannot cut your way into obedience. You cannot slice ears open so people will finally listen. Peter’s sword doesn’t open hearing among Israel; it only severs it. If the Jewish leadership, if the high priest himself, is ever going to truly hear, it will not be because a zealous disciple swung harder. It will be because the true King stooped to heal.
Malchus becomes a sign-act aimed at the leadership of Israel. The servant who listens for the high priest has his ear cut off by misguided zeal and restored by the very man they’ve declared a threat. The message is there for anyone with eyes to see (and ears to hear): your zeal is maiming the very people you claim to shepherd; the King you oppose is actually restoring what your system is destroying.
The leadership has to put on its ears.
Milcah and the Daughters of Zelophehad: A Plea for Inheritance
Into this, my friend brought another story: the daughters of Zelophehad in Numbers 27.
Their situation is simple and devastating. Their father has died in the wilderness. He has no sons. Under the existing pattern, the line effectively ends there. No son, no continuation of the name, no portion in the land. These daughters stand on the edge of erasure. No husband to cover this gap. No brother to carry the line. Just five women, and a looming loss of inheritance.
But these women do something bold. They come forward.
They stand “before Moses, before Eleazar the priest, and before the leaders.” It’s crucial that the priestly leadership is explicitly mentioned. This is not a private chat; this is a formal, covenantal, legal appeal in the presence of the people’s highest human authorities. They lay out their case plainly: Why should our father’s name disappear just because he had no son? Give us a possession among our father’s brothers.
They are not asking for sentiment; they are asking for justice within the covenant. They are asking that the kingly-legal system recognize their claim.
Moses does exactly what leadership is supposed to do in such a moment: he brings their case before the Lord. And here is where the story turns. The Lord affirms them. “The daughters of Zelophehad speak right.” Then He issues a new statute for Israel: when there is no son, daughters are to receive the inheritance.
In other words, a plea from those with no portion triggers a real adjustment in the administration of inheritance. The practical outworking of the law is widened to include those who were about to be written out of the story.
Reading this through the name “Milcah” highlights that royal dimension. If we think of her as a queenly, royal-feminine figure, she becomes a picture of vulnerable royalty: one who bears a royal destiny but stands uncovered, with no human guarantee of inheritance, appealing to God’s appointed mediator for a share in the land.
And leadership is expected to hear it. The priest, the elders, the entire judicial structure must recognize what God has said: “They speak right.” They must adjust their thinking, their practice, their law‑handling to match what the King has revealed.
They need to put on their ears.
Malchus and Milcah: Kingship, Ears, and Inheritance
Here is where the connection between Malchus and Milcah began to crystallize for me.
On the one hand, Malchus: the king’s servant, the ear of the high priestly establishment, wounded by misguided zeal, then healed by the rejected King.
On the other hand, Milcah: the uncovered woman, standing with her sisters before Moses, demanding a rightful place in the inheritance, and heard by God in such a way that the legal order of the covenant is expanded to include her.
Both stories revolve around leadership and hearing.
In the wilderness, the leadership of Israel—Moses, the high priest, the elders—must hear a plea from those with no portion and allow God to show them a broader justice than they had yet conceived. The result is a change in how inheritance is handled.
In the garden, the leadership of Israel—embodied in the high priest’s household—must see that their zeal has deafened them, that their system is cutting off ears while the true King restores them. The result, if they will receive it, is an invitation to repent of their violence and let their hearing be healed.
In both cases, God is pressing a point on those who sit closest to the center of religious power: put on your ears. Remember your own Scriptures. You’ve seen this pattern before.
You have already watched God widen the circle of inheritance in response to a just plea. You have already watched Him affirm the claim of those who, by default, would have been disinherited. You ought to recognize what is happening now.
If the daughters of Zelophehad are a sign that the King once expanded the law of inheritance, then Malchus in the garden is a sign that He intends to do it again in a deeper, more radical way—this time not just for daughters in Israel, but for all those who stand with no natural claim to the promises.
Peter’s Education: From Sword to Shepherd
Sitting in the middle of all this is Peter.
He is the one who swings the sword at Malchus. He is the one whose zeal maims the ear of the high priest’s servant. And he is the one Jesus rebukes and then later restores on the shore of Galilee.
“Do you love me?”
“Lord, you know that I love you.”
“Feed my lambs… tend my sheep… feed my sheep.”
The contrast is stark. In the garden, Peter tries to defend Jesus with steel. By the Sea of Tiberias, Jesus calls Peter to defend the flock with love. In the garden, Peter’s zeal cuts off hearing. By the sea, Jesus charges him to become a voice that feeds and guards and gathers.
Peter has to learn that the kingdom is not advanced by zeal that mirrors the world’s violence, but by cruciform, shepherd‑like care. He must learn to trust the King who heals ears, instead of trying to secure the kingdom by force.
Later, in Acts, that lesson will widen again when Peter is sent to Cornelius. The same Peter who once maimed the ear of the high priest’s servant will be the one to announce to a Gentile household that the Holy Spirit has been poured out on them as well. The man who swung the sword at a “king’s man” will become the herald who opens the inheritance to those far outside the kingly center of Jerusalem.
Milcah and the Expanded Inheritance
Here is where the daughters of Zelophehad begin to sound like a prophetic preview of the Gentile story.
Like those daughters, the nations had no natural claim in the land, no line in the genealogies, no tribal slot in Israel’s map. They were strangers to the covenants of promise, with no inheritance line to appeal to. No husband, no father, no brother within Israel’s structures to guarantee them a portion.
And yet, in the Messiah, a case is brought before the King.
Jesus, the true Son and Heir, does what Moses could only prefigure. He stands before the Father with the claim that those who are “not a people” should become His people; that those far off should be brought near; that those who have no inheritance in the law should receive an inheritance in the promise. In Him, the Church, the Gentile “Milcah,”—the queen with no husband—comes under the covering of the Bridegroom‑King and receives a place in the kingdom.
If Zelophehad’s daughters once caused the Lord to widen the practical administration of the inheritance inside Israel, the cross and resurrection proclaim, in an even greater way, that those who were outside are now fellow heirs. The law of inheritance is fulfilled and expanded so that in Christ, Jew and Gentile become co‑heirs.
The Message to the Leadership: Put On Your Ears
So what is the “message to the king” in the garden? And how does Milcah help clarify it?
It is not that the Lord Himself lacks hearing. He is the one who heard the daughters’ plea. He is the one who sees Malchus’ wound. He is the one who sends His Son to open the way for the nations.
The crisis of hearing lies with the leadership—with the high priest, with the elders, with all those who sit at the center of religious power and pride themselves on guarding the covenant.
They are the ones who must put on their ears.
They should remember Milcah—those daughters standing before Moses and the priest, asking for an inheritance, and being vindicated by God. They should read that story and ask themselves whether the God who once widened the inheritance for overlooked daughters might be doing something similar in their own day.
They should look at Malchus—their own servant, the ear of their own household—wounded by a disciple’s zeal and healed by the very man they are trying to destroy. They should see in that act a sign that their zeal has gone terribly wrong, that the King they oppose is the only one truly restoring Israel’s hearing.
The tragedy is that, by and large, they do not make the connection.
But the sign remains. For anyone willing to read these stories together, Milcah and Malchus stand side by side as a quiet but piercing word to every generation of religious leadership:
- Do not assume your current boundary lines of inheritance are final.
- Do not harden your ears against the cry of those with no portion.
- Do not trust the sword of zeal where the King is busy healing ears.
- Do not forget that the God of Zelophehad’s daughters is the same God who, in Jesus, is writing a global will.
The high priest needs to put on his ears. The church’s leaders need to put on theirs. Because the King is still listening, still healing, and still expanding His inheritance in ways that surprise those who think they already know exactly who belongs inside the story.
CONCLUSION:
The New Testament itself invites this kind of listening: “these things happened to them as examples and were written down for our instruction,” and we are to “compare spiritual things with spiritual,” letting one Spirit‑breathed text shed light on another until the larger message comes into focus.
Paul says that “whatever was written in earlier times was written for our instruction,” so that through the Scriptures we gain endurance, encouragement, and hope. That’s a warrant to go back to stories like the daughters of Zelophehad and ask what they’re still saying to us now
Paul also says that “these things happened to them as examples and were written down as warnings for us,” speaking specifically about events in the wilderness. That invites us to read Israel’s history as a patterned set of examples meant to shape the church’s discernment.
![]() |
| SHEMA |
Epilogue:
Peter’s zealous reflex's are a reflection of the Zealous Maccabees who united Israel approximately 150 years BC. The Maccabees made Israel's first treaty with Rome, even before Rome was an Empire. The Romans brought the crucifixion. I see this a relevant to my explanation.THE WRECKAGE OF YESTERYEAR
![]() |
| Wreckage from Improper Lane Change |
Wars are often the wreckage of nations that refused to "stay in their lane"—nations that would not be content with the borders, limits, and responsibilities God in His providence assigned them.
In much the same way, the wreckage in our personal lives is often not much different—broken relationships, restless hearts, and needless wounds tracing back to the moments we refused to stay in the lane God set for us.
The "wreckage" of today, caused by the lane changes of yesteryear, stands before us like a road sign from God, warning and inviting us to choose a different path for tomorrow.
Staying in the Lane God Marked Out
We live in a world that celebrates the freedom to change lanes and redraw your boundaries. Yet from the very beginning, Scripture presents another vision of freedom: not the freedom to swerve wherever we wish, but the freedom of staying in the lane the Lord has marked out in His Word. It is the truth that sets us free.
Torah does not just tell us what is right and wrong; it sets boundaries, lanes, and guardrails meant to protect us from destruction. When we cross those lines, the damage may not be contained to us. Like a multiple vehicle pile up, the wreckage often impacts others and may travel down generations. It shows up in places we never intended and in people we never met.
Saul and Amalek: The Cost of Partial Obedience
Consider King Saul. God’s command concerning Amalek was not vague or optional. It was precise: devote Amalek to destruction, including King Agag. This was not cruelty; it was judgment on a nation that had attacked Israel from behind, preying on the weak and weary. The lane was clear.
Saul almost obeyed.
He fought the battle, defeated Amalek, but spared King Agag and kept the best of the livestock. King Saul stayed close to the lane, but not inside it. And Samuel confronted him with words that still burn: “To obey is better than sacrifice.”
Generations later, in the book of Esther, a chilling title appears: “Haman the Agagite.” However one traces the exact genealogy, the point is theologically sharp. A man from Agag’s line rises in Persia with a genocidal hatred of the Jews. The unfinished obedience of Saul becomes the unfinished threat of Amalek, resurfacing in another empire, another era, another attempt at Jewish annihilation.
When God draws a hard line, it is not because He is petty; it is because He sees further down the road than we do. Saul’s partial obedience opened space for an old enemy to reappear with greater force. How many “Agags” do we spare in our own lives—sins we manage, habits we excuse, resentments we protect—only to have them re‑emerge later with more power, more damage, more reach than we ever imagined?
Esau, Edom, and the Restless Heart
Esau’s story gives us another picture of the dangers of leaving the lane God assigns.
Esau despised his birthright, traded it for a bowl of stew, and then later wept for the blessing he had thrown away. His descendants became the nation of Edom, settled in the hill country of Seir, south of Israel. God allotted them a territory. He drew a line on the map and said, in effect, “This is your portion.”
But Scripture and Jewish memory preserve a long, bitter hostility between Edom and Israel. Edom was not content to live quietly within its borders. There was envy, grievance, and an ancient resentment that never quite died. Over time, Edom pushed, encroached, shifted, and entangled itself in contested lands and conflicts it could have avoided had it been content with God’s assignment.
Isn’t that what happens to us? God gives us a portion—a calling, a measure of influence, a place, a set of gifts—and our flesh whispers, “It isn’t enough.” We look at someone else’s land, someone else’s position, someone else’s story, and we drift. We leave the lane God set for us, and step into rivalries and conflicts we were never meant to fight.
Sometimes the wars we end up in are not the result of God’s mysterious providence but of our restless refusal to accept the lot He has wisely given.
Prophets, Warnings, and a Fallen Temple
The same pattern appears in Israel’s history with the prophets and the Temple.
Before Jerusalem fell to Babylon, God did not remain silent. He sent Jeremiah and others to cry out against idolatry, injustice, and covenant unfaithfulness. The prophets were like flashing warning lights on the dashboard: slow down, turn back, you are about to cross a line from which there will be no easy return.
But the people stiffened their necks. They trusted in the building (“The Temple of the Lord!”) while despising the God whose name sanctified it. They treated His Word as background noise. They assumed that because they were God’s people, they could drive in any lane they chose and He would still keep them from the cliff.
The result was catastrophic: the city burned, the Temple fell, and the people were carried into exile.
We often imagine judgment as lightning from heaven. In reality, judgment often looks like God letting us live with the consequences of leaving His lane. When we ignore His warnings, we eventually collide with the guardrails He built into reality itself.
The Ten Commandments and the World We Long For
At the center of Torah stand the Ten Words—the Ten Commandments. They are not merely religious slogans; they are a revealed description of the lane in which human life actually flourishes.
No other gods. No carved images. No taking God’s Name in vain. Keep the Sabbath holy. Honor father and mother. Do not murder. Do not commit adultery. Do not steal. Do not bear false witness. Do not covet.
Imagine, just for a moment, a world that truly stayed in that lane.
No idolatrous systems that devour people in the name of profit or power. No murders, no wars of greed, no schools drilled in active‑shooter protocols. No adultery shattering families and scarring children. No theft or corruption draining trust from our communities. No false witness polarizing societies and destroying reputations in an instant. No covetousness driving consumer bondage and national conflict. We do not have to stretch very far to see that entire categories of tragedy would simply not exist.
Torah does not crush human desire; it purifies and redirects it. The commands of God are not arbitrary rules; they are the lines on the road of reality. Cross them, and things break.
The Quiet Wreckage: Our Own Lanes
It is easy to see this in Saul, in Esau, in Israel, in “the world out there.” But the Spirit presses the question closer:
What about us?
Think of all the personal suffering we have caused to ourselves and to those we love simply because we stepped outside the lane God set for us in His Word. Not the suffering others inflicted on us—that is real enough—but the pain that traces back to our own choices.
- The relationship strained or shattered because we would not put away our pride, our grudge, our need to be right.
- The secret sin we “spared,” like Agag, thinking we could keep it under control, only to watch it grow and threaten our marriage, our ministry, our integrity.
- The financial wreckage that followed patterns of coveting and dishonesty rather than contentment and stewardship.
- The anxiety and exhaustion that came from refusing Sabbath rest, living as if everything depended on us.
- The shame and regret of sexual sin when we treated God’s design as negotiable.
We know these stories because we have lived them—and because the people we love have lived through the fallout with us. When we leave God’s lane, we do not walk alone; we drag our families, our communities, and sometimes generations after us into the skid.
Staying in the Lane
So what does it mean, practically, to “stay in the lane God sets in the Torah”?
It means we stop treating God’s commands as suggestions or ideals and start treating them as the actual structure of reality. It means we repent not only of the obvious, scandalous sins, but of the respectable compromises: the partial obedience of Saul, the resentful restlessness of Esau, the selective hearing of Israel.
It means asking, very concretely:
- Where am I sparing an “Agag” God has told me to put to death?
- Where am I resenting the portion God has assigned me and reaching into someone else’s lane?
- Where am I ignoring a warning light—through Scripture, conscience, or godly counsel—because I do not want to slow down or turn around?
- Which of the Ten Words do I treat as optional?
Invariably, because we are human, we will make improper lane changes. Fortunately, because God knows us better than we know ourselves, God provided for that as well.
The good news that the Christian gospel offers is that there is mercy for those who have already crossed the line. The same God who draws the lane also opens a way back through repentance and faith. But that mercy does not erase the wisdom of His boundaries; it restores us to them.
The invitation is not simply, “Feel bad about your sin,” but, “Come home to the lane I marked out for your good.”
![]() |
| SHEMA! (Here and obey)—The watchword of faith. |
If we will listen—if we will heed where Saul, Esau, and Israel did not—the ripple effects can be just as real, but in the opposite direction: blessing instead of curse, repair instead of ruin, peace instead of conflict. Our children and grandchildren may never know the disasters they were spared because we chose, by law or by grace, to stay in the lane God set for us.
Deuteronomy 5:32–33—“So you shall be careful to do as the Lord your God has commanded you; you shall not turn aside to the right hand or to the left. You shall walk in all the way that the Lord your God has commanded you, that you may live, and that it may be well with you, and that you may prolong your days in the land which you shall possess.”
Epilogue:
This could be a Purim message for today. The wreckage in the Middle-East is the penultimate sign—the wreckage of improper lane changes by Essau and Israel.
I VOTED FOR THIS!
https://www.youtube.com/live/ojgW9lj8sJk?si=hMIWTk2H3v4v5pSU
May God Bless israel and America:
Operation "Epic Fury" began on the Iranian religious calender date of 9/11. That is neither a coincidence or an accident.
Sunday, March 1, 2026
18 - AVRAMS HOSPITALITY AND A TOAST TO LIFE
![]() |
| L'chaim |
In Genesis 18, Abraham’s hospitality unfolds like a living commentary on what it means to choose life in a world shadowed by death. He sits at the entrance of his tent “in the heat of the day,” yet when three strangers appear, he runs to meet them, bows low, and urgently insists that they rest, wash, and eat. The desert setting makes this more than courtesy; water, shade, and bread are the difference between withering and surviving. Abraham’s table becomes a place where human vulnerability is honored and life is practically preserved.
Into that setting of simple, costly care, God weaves a far deeper gift of life. The strangers’ visit climaxes in the promise of a son to Abraham and Sarah, whose bodies are described as good as dead. Their barrenness, long-standing and bitter, is met by a word of sheer grace: “I will surely return to you… and Sarah your wife shall have a son.” The household that has been faithfully offering sustenance to others will itself become the cradle of new life. Isaac ("We Laugh")—signals that this is not just survival, but overflowing, surprising joy.
In Jewish practice, the phrase "l’chaim" (“to life”) gathers this whole biblical current into a single, rich expression. To raise a glass and say "l’chaim" is to bless life before God and with one another. We rejoice over food and drink as gifts. meant for blessing.Conclusion:
When we speak of “Abraham’s hospitality and a toast to life,” we are not merely linking an ancient story with a later custom; we are tracing one continuous thread. Abraham’s open tent and generous table anticipate every later moment when Jews gather, eat, bless, and say l’chaim. The meal in Genesis 18 is the seed; the culture of blessing life, protecting the vulnerable, and celebrating God’s faithfulness is the fruit. In both, the message is the same: before God and with one another, we choose life.
Deuteronomy 30:19–20—“I call heaven and earth to witness against you today, that I have set before you life and death, blessing and curse. Therefore choose life, that you and your offspring may live, loving the Lord your God, obeying his voice and holding fast to him, for he is your life and length of days…”
Friday, February 27, 2026
God’s Gift of Seir to Esau
God’s Gift of Seir to Esau – And the Prophecies Against Edom
When Joshua gathered Israel at Shechem near the end of his life, he did more than rehearse Israel’s story; he also recalled how God dealt with Israel’s relatives and their lands. In Joshua 24, God reminds Israel that Esau, too, received a divine inheritance:“‘Then I took your father Abraham from beyond the River and led him through all the land of Canaan and made his offspring many. I gave him Isaac. And to Isaac I gave Jacob and Esau. And I gave Esau the hill country of Seir to possess, but Jacob and his children went down to Egypt.’”
That quiet line—“I gave Esau the hill country of Seir to possess”—tells us that Edom’s land was not an accident of history, but a gift from the same God who would later give Canaan to Israel. The story of Esau, Edom, and Mount Seir, read together with the prophets, speaks both to the ancient world and to the tensions in today’s Middle East.
The Land of Esau: Mount Seir and Edom
Biblically, Esau’s territory is the “hill country of Seir,” later known as Edom. In modern terms, this corresponds mainly to the Al-Sharat (Jibāl ash-Sharāh) mountain range of southern Jordan, running along the eastern side of the Arabah from the Dead Sea toward the Gulf of Aqaba. This rugged highland forms the ancient heartland of Edom, a natural fortress of cliffs, canyons, and plateaus.Within this region lay:
- The area around Petra, with its rock-cut structures and hidden approaches.
- The region near modern Buseirah, widely identified with ancient Bozrah, an important Edomite center and, at times, a capital.
After the Babylonian conquest in the 6th century BCE, Edomites migrated west into the Negev and the southern Judean hill country. This new region became known as Idumea in Greek and Roman times, centered around what is now the southern West Bank (near Hebron) and stretching toward the Mediterranean. Over the centuries, the Edomites/Idumeans were gradually absorbed into the wider Jewish and regional populations, losing a distinct national identity even as their ancestral land remained a recognizable geographic and archaeological zone.
God’s Warning: “Do Not Touch Esau’s Land”
Long before Joshua’s speech at Shechem, God had already spoken about Edom’s land in the wilderness generation. When Israel skirted the territory of Edom in the days of Moses, God gave unusually strong instructions (see Deuteronomy 2):
- Israel was to be **very** careful not to provoke Edom.
- Israel was forbidden to take any of Edom’s land—“not so much as a footstep” or “one foot’s breadth.”
- The reason was theological, not merely political: “I have given Esau the hill country of Seir as his property.”
This is land-grant language. Just as God later declares to Israel, “I give you this land” regarding Canaan, He declares to Esau, “I gave him the hill country of Seir.” The family of Abraham is being divided by divine allotment: Isaac fathers Jacob and Esau; Jacob receives the covenant line and eventually Canaan, while Esau receives Seir.
Two key implications follow:
- Edom’s possession of Seir is legitimate, rooted in God’s own decision, not in theft or chance.
- Israel’s obedience is tested by how it treats Esau’s God-given inheritance. Israel must relate to Edom as paying guests, not as conquerors.
This early warning to Israel becomes essential background for understanding the later prophetic judgments. God’s treatment of Edom begins with gift and boundary, not with rejection.
From Brother Nation to Hostile Neighbor
Despite the shared ancestry of Jacob and Esau, the relationship between Israel and Edom becomes one of strained rivalry and open hostility. Scripture highlights several turning points:
- Edom refuses Israel passage during the wilderness journey (Numbers 20), meeting them with a show of force rather than brotherly help.
- Ongoing tensions arise over trade routes, borders, and strategic highland territory.
- Most seriously, during times when Judah is attacked—especially in the Babylonian crisis—Edom is portrayed as rejoicing over Judah’s fall, plundering, or handing over fugitives.
This last pattern is the moral tipping point. When God disciplines Judah through foreign invasion, Edom does not tremble and repent; instead, it gloats and exploits the moment. It is as though Esau, seeing Jacob under judgment, runs in to kick his brother and seize his inheritance. That is the behavior the prophets confront.
Prophets Against Edom and Mount Seir
Multiple prophetic books speak against Edom, but Ezekiel 35 concentrates the themes in a striking way. There, God tells Ezekiel: “Set your face against Mount Seir, and prophesy against it.” The land itself—the symbol of Edom’s God-given inheritance—becomes the addressee of judgment.
In Ezekiel 35, God charges Mount Seir/Edom with:
- Harboring an “everlasting hatred” against Israel.
- Giving the people of Israel over to the sword “at the time of their calamity.”
- Saying in its heart, regarding Israel and Judah, “These two nations and these two lands shall be mine, and we will possess them.”
Because of this, God declares that Mount Seir will become a desolation and a waste. Its cities will be emptied; its mountains will be filled with the slain. The one that rejoiced over Judah’s ruin and coveted Judah’s land will itself become a perpetual reminder of judgment.
Other prophetic texts echo and expand this theme:
- Obadiah condemns Edom for standing aloof, gloating, looting, and handing over survivors when Jerusalem fell.
- Isaiah 34 pictures the Lord’s sword descending on Edom, turning its land into burning pitch and desolation.
- Jeremiah 49 announces the stripping of Edom’s wisdom, defenses, and security.
In every case, Edom is judged not simply for existing, but for particular attitudes and actions: rejoicing at a brother’s calamity, exploiting God’s discipline of Israel, and coveting what God had given to another. The original gift of Seir does not shield Edom from accountability; if anything, it heightens it.
Edom, Idumea, and Forced Absorption
By the late Second Temple period, the descendants of Edom had shifted west into Idumea. In the second and first centuries BCE, the Hasmonean rulers of Judea expanded their control over surrounding territories. John Hyrcanus conquered Idumea and offered its inhabitants a stark choice:
- Accept circumcision and Jewish law and remain in the land.
- Or refuse and be expelled.
Many chose to accept circumcision and merge into the Jewish nation. Over time, Idumeans became part of the Jewish polity; Herod the Great himself came from an Idumean family. Eventually, Edom as a separate nation disappeared from the map, its people absorbed into the complex ethnic and religious mix of the region.
The Bible does not present this forced assimilation as a divine command; it is political history, not Torah injunction. In light of God’s earlier statement—“I have given Esau Mount Seir”—it stands as a sobering example of how human power can override, or at least ignore, earlier divine patterns and boundaries.
Why This Matters in Today’s Middle East
The story of Esau, Jacob, and the land of Seir speaks with uncomfortable relevance to the modern conflicts of the region. Scripture does not provide a ready-made peace plan or endorse any particular political arrangement, but it offers moral patterns that cut across all sides.
First, the biblical narrative reminds us that God’s concern extends beyond a single people or border. He assigns land, identity, and history not only to Israel but also to its neighbors. That does not erase the unique covenant role of Israel, but it challenges any vision that treats other peoples as disposable, uprootable, or irrelevant to God’s purposes. The God who said, “I gave Esau the hill country of Seir,” confronts any attitude—ancient or modern—that pretends the history, presence, and dignity of neighboring populations do not matter.
Second, the prophetic oracles against Edom warn against turning another people’s disaster into an opportunity for gain. When any actor in the region responds to war, terror, or collapse with gloating, expansionism, or plunder, it walks the same moral ground that drew judgment on Edom. Scripture is clear: God notices not only aggression but also opportunism, not only invasion but the heart that quietly says, “Their calamity is my chance.”
Third, the picture of Edom’s “perpetual hatred” exposes the danger of letting ancient grievances define identity. In today’s Middle East, memory is long and pain is real, but when entire communities are formed primarily around what “they did to us” and what “was taken from us,” any act of revenge can begin to feel justified. The Edom story shows where that road leads: mutual devastation and divine rebuke.
Fourth, the forced absorption of Idumea under the Hasmoneans stands as a warning about using religious or national power to erase the other. Attempts to “solve” conflict by coercive assimilation or demographic engineering may create short-term control but do not heal the underlying wound. In biblical terms, they repeat patterns of ignoring God-given distinctness and human dignity.
Finally, the Jacob–Esau saga teaches that God’s purposes continue in a world of unresolved conflict, but never without moral accountability. Nations rise and fall; borders move; populations mingle. Yet God still weighs how we treat those under judgment or distress, whether we respect the boundaries He has set, and whether we recognize that our “enemy” may, in His eyes, still be a brother.
For believers, the relevance is sharp. We are not called to map every prophecy one-to-one onto modern headlines, but to let the moral logic of Scripture shape our posture. The God who gave Esau Seir and later judged Edom for hatred and opportunism still watches the nations. Any path toward genuine peace in the region will have to reckon not only with territories and treaties, but with hearts that choose either the way of Edom—perpetual hatred and opportunistic gain—or the costly path of restraint, repentance, and neighbor-love.
Thursday, February 26, 2026
JOSHUA CHOSE A RETIREMENT COMMUNITY
Joshua 19:50—By command of the Lord they gave him the city that he asked, Timnath-serah in the hill country of Ephraim. And he rebuilt the city and settled in it.
As people get to our so called "golden years," many think about where to go to spend them. Imagine you have lived a long and productive life, and you have to choose a retirement community.
In the book of Joshua there are 24 chapters. The book begins with Joshua leading the tribes across the Jordan and entering the land. Much of the book involves Joshua and the Children of Israel's battles to conquer and take possession of the land God promised to their forefathers' Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. After the battle of Jericho there are many more battles. There is also the saga of settling the Ark of the Testimony, with the Tablets received at Sinai, in Shiloh.
The last chapters involve dividing up the inheritance to the tribes of the sons of Jacob, Israel. There is also a place given to Caleb, the famous other spy who wanted the Israelites to go into the land the first time.
Joshua's Retirement Place
After all the land is assigned, Joshua recieves his place in promise land. I think the place Joshua recieves has a very interesting significance.
Joshua settles down for the final years of his life in a place called Timnath-serah (also called Timnath-heres). It is generally identified today with the archaeological site of Khirbet Tibnah, located in the western hill country of Samaria/Ephraim. Actual ruins sit on a strategic ridge almost 20 miles northwest of Jerusalem.
Timnath-serah is a biblical city in the hill country of Ephraim assigned to Joshua as his personal inheritance (Joshua 19:50). The Hebrew name translates to "portion of abundance" or "remaining portion," signifying God's generous provision. It is also known as Timnath-heres, meaning "portion of the sun."
THE MIRACLE
History and tradition remembers this as where the sun stood still during the during the Battle of Gibeon while Joshua was leading the Israelites against a coalition of five Amorite kings. To ensure enough daylight to complete the victory before nightfall, Joshua commanded the sun and moon to halt their movement.
The "miracle" in the text states the sun stopped in the middle of the sky and delayed setting for about a full day. The Bible highlights this as an unparalleled event, stating there has never been a day like it before or since when the Lord listened to a human voice in such a cosmic way. This event was also recorded in the Book of Jashar (or Jasher), an ancient non-canonical collection of songs and heroic deeds that has since been lost.
The Book of Joshua Doesn't End There
Joshua receives his inheritance in chapter 19, but there are 24 chapters in his book.
Just after we read about Joshua's inheritance at the end of chapter 19, chapter 20 establishes the cities of refugee that God instructed Moses on.
Joshua 20:1-3—Then the Lord said to Joshua, 2 “Say to the people of Israel, ‘Appoint the cities of refuge, of which I spoke to you through Moses, 3 that the manslayer who strikes any person without intent or unknowingly may flee there. They shall be for you a refuge from the avenger of blood.
In chapter 21, the Levites, the priestly sons of Aaron and the Kohathites all recieve their inheritance. By the end of chapter 21 the lands are all assigned.
Joshua 21:43—Thus the Lord gave to Israel all the land that he swore to give to their fathers. And they took possession of it, and they settled there. 44 And the Lord gave them rest on every side just as he had sworn to their fathers. Not one of all their enemies had withstood them, for the Lord had given all their enemies into their hands. 45 Not one word of all the good promises that the Lord had made to the house of Israel had failed; all came to pass.
The next chapter, 22, Joshua has some loose ends to take care of with tribes to the East of the Jordan and then he essentially discharges all the tribes and his armies to go to the lands assigned to them.
Joshua 22:4—And now the Lord your God has given rest to your brothers, as he promised them. Therefore turn and go to your tents in the land where your possession lies, which Moses the servant of the Lord gave you on the other side of the Jordan. 5 Only be very careful to observe the commandment and the law that Moses the servant of the Lord commanded you, to love the Lord your God, and to walk in all his ways and to keep his commandments and to cling to him and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul.” 6 So Joshua blessed them and sent them away, and they went to their tents.
Chapter 22 ends in such a way that it reverses or reconciles the bad report from the spies way back when the previous generation first reached the Jordan. (See Numbers 13:32)
Joshua 22:32—Then Phinehas the son of Eleazar the priest, and the chiefs, returned from the people of Reuben and the people of Gad in the land of Gilead to the land of Canaan, to the people of Israel, and brought back word to them. 33 And the report was good in the eyes of the people of Israel. And the people of Israel blessed God and spoke no more of making war against them to destroy the land where the people of Reuben and the people of Gad were settled. 34 The people of Reuben and the people of Gad called the altar Witness, “For,” they said, “it is a witness between us that the Lord is God.”
COMING TO THE END OF THE ROAD
Now let's move on to the last two chapters and see what the Lord has left for us to hear.
Joshua 23–24 function as Joshua’s “golden years” message: two farewell addresses and a covenant-renewal ceremony that show how a man who has finished his wars chooses to “retire” by binding the next generation to the Lord rather than to himself.
Joshua 23: A Farewell to Leaders
Joshua 23 is a private, pastoral address to Israel’s elders, heads, judges, and officers after “a long time” of rest in the land. He is old and advanced in years, and his focus is not on reminiscing about battles but on how his people will live once he is gone.
Key emphases:
God’s finished work: Joshua reminds them that God has fought for them and driven out great nations, and that their current rest is the fruit of divine promise, not human prowess.
Clinging loyalty: Joshua calls them to “be very strong,” to keep and do all that is written in the book of the law of Moses, to love the Lord, and to cling to Him, echoing Deuteronomy’s language.
Separation from idolatry: He warns that mixing with the remaining nations and their gods will turn those nations into snares and traps and will bring covenant curses, not blessing.
No automatic security: The same faithful God who gave every promise will also faithfully bring every threatened judgment if Israel turns back. Joshua refuses a sentimental ending; fidelity, not nostalgia, must define Israel’s future.
In other words, as he “retires,” Joshua does not secure his own legacy but insists that their future depends on ongoing covenant loyalty.
Joshua 24: Covenant Renewal at Shechem
Chapter 24 shifts from leaders to the whole nation, gathered at Shechem, and takes the form of a formal covenant-renewal treaty between the Divine and His people.
Shechem is no ordinary location. It is where Jacob sent Joseph to check on his brothers and brought back a "bad report." At that point Joseph's brothers, the future tribes of israel, wanted to kill Joseph. The connection to that location is profound! What was is in Shechem that Jacob was worried about? The answer is the idols that came out of Laban's house. Do you see the connection to Abraham?
Shechem is the crossroads where Abraham first heard the land promise, where Jacob buried the idols from Laban’s world, and where Joseph’s brothers first showed their murderous, idolatrous hearts.
The structure:
- Historical prologue (24:2–13): Speaking in the Lord’s voice (“Thus says the Lord”), Joshua recounts Israel’s story from Abraham, through Egypt, the wilderness, and the conquest, stressing that every decisive victory was God’s act, not Israel’s. This framing reminds an aged nation that their identity is pure grace.
- Call for exclusive allegiance (24:14–15): On that basis, Joshua demands they fear the Lord, serve Him in sincerity and truth, and put away the gods beyond the River and in Egypt. His famous “But as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord” sets his own “retirement decision” in stark contrast to the surrounding culture.
- Israel’s triple affirmation (24:16–24): The people insist they will serve the Lord, but Joshua soberly warns them of God’s holiness and jealousy; they still affirm, and Joshua has them testify against themselves that they have chosen the Lord.
- Ratification and witness (24:25–27): Joshua cuts a covenant, writes these words in the book of the law, and sets up a great stone under the oak at the sanctuary of the Lord in Shechem as a witness to their promises. That is where Jacob buried the foreign gods and earrings “under the oak which was near Shechem.
This is Joshua’s final “act”: not building a monument to his campaigns, but binding the people to a covenant the Lord authored and owns.
FLASHBACK:
The last chapter, 24, concludes with a clear statement.
Joshua 24:24-28—“The Lord our God we will serve, and his voice we will obey.” So Joshua made a covenant with the people that day, and put in place statutes and rules for them at Shechem. And Joshua wrote these words in the Book of the Law of God. And he took a large stone and set it up there under the terebinth that was by the sanctuary of the Lord. And Joshua said to all the people, “Behold, this stone shall be a witness against us, for it has heard all the words of the Lord that he spoke to us. Therefore it shall be a witness against you, lest you deal falsely with your God.” So Joshua sent the people away, every man to his inheritance."
Like the rocks at Gilgal, the Large Stone in Joshua 24 is a witness of who we are to serve!
The End of Joshua’s Story
The book ends with three burials: Joshua's, Joseph’s bones, and Eleazar the priest. Each burial quietly reinforces the theme of promises fulfilled and yet not fully final.
- Joshua is buried in his “remaining portion,” signaling that God’s promises to him as leader have been kept.
- Joseph’s bones, brought from Egypt, are buried at Shechem in the land he had spoken of in faith long before, showing that the exodus story has come full circle—but also hinting that Israel’s hope still reaches beyond this settling.
- Eleazar’s burial marks the passing of the priestly generation that shepherded Israel from wilderness into land, leaving the people with covenant documents, a witness stone, and graves in the inheritance to remind them that leaders die, but the covenant Lord remains.
Joshua’s “golden years,” then, are not about escaping to a quiet ridge but about finishing his vocation by handing Israel back to God’s Word and presence.
Do you see how that is a metaphor for the end of life?
Joshua's retirement address is essentially a message to us all:
- Choose whom you will serve;
- Remember what God has done;
- Let your final portion—like his Timnath-serah—be the abundant share that remains when you give God everything.
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
DO YOU SEE WHAT I SEE?
![]() |
| Rabbi Akiva’s Laugh: The Hidden Call for Messiah |
The Road to Emmaus, Rabbi Akiva, and How Yeshua Speaks into Two Destructions
Most Christians know the Road to Emmaus in Luke 24: two discouraged disciples, walking away from Jerusalem after the crucifixion, are met by the risen Yeshua, who opens the Scriptures to them and turns their despair into burning hope.
What many don’t know is that there is a famous story in the Jewish tradition that follows a very similar pattern. It appears centuries later in the Talmud, but it works with the same biblical logic. When you set that story next to Emmaus, Yeshua’s conversation on the road turns out to be even more amazing and prophetic.
He is not just comforting two men in one moment. He is speaking to two audiences, in two time frames:
1) His followers, crushed by His death.
2) Jewish believers who will live through the destruction of the Second Temple about forty years after His crucifixion.
To see it, you have to start with Rabbi Akiva.
Rabbi Akiva and the Fox in the Ruin
In a classic rabbinic story, several great sages—Rabban Gamliel, Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah, Rabbi Yehoshua, and Rabbi Akiva—go up to Jerusalem after the Second Temple has been destroyed.They reach the Temple Mount and see a fox coming out of the place where the Holy of Holies once stood.
The others begin to weep. Rabbi Akiva starts to laugh.
They challenge him: how can you laugh at this? The holiest site on earth—where only the High Priest could enter once a year on Yom Kippur—is now so desolate that wild animals run through it. For them, the fox is a symbol of total desecration and abandonment.
Akiva answers by connecting what they see to two passages from the Hebrew Bible:
1. A judgment prophecy (Micah 3:12, also quoted in Jeremiah 26:18):
Zion will be plowed like a field, Jerusalem will become a heap of ruins, and the mountain of the House (the Temple Mount) will become like a forested height.
2. A consolation prophecy (Zechariah 8:4–5):
Old men and old women will again sit in the streets of Jerusalem, each with staff in hand because of great age, and boys and girls will play in its streets.
Akiva’s logic is straightforward but profound:
- The fox in the ruins shows that the judgment prophecy has literally come to pass. What Micah warned about has happened right in front of their eyes.
- If God’s word of judgment has been fulfilled, then God’s word of comfort and restoration is just as certain. The fulfilled destruction guarantees the fulfilled consolation.
That’s why Akiva laughs. He’s not rejoicing in the ruin itself. He’s rejoicing in the fact that, if this part of the prophecy is real, then the promise of a restored Jerusalem is also guaranteed. The others, hearing this, say to him: “Akiva, you have comforted us. Akiva, you have comforted us.”
So, in summary, Akiva’s story follows this pattern:
- Visible catastrophe (a ruined Temple, a fox in the Holy of Holies).
- A master teacher re-reads that catastrophe in light of Scripture.
- Fulfilled judgment becomes proof that comfort and restoration are on the way.
- Despair turns into deep, scripturally grounded hope.
Now keep that pattern in mind and turn back to the Road to Emmaus.
Emmaus: The Same Scriptural Logic, Centered on the Messiah
In Luke 24:13–35, two disciples are walking from Jerusalem to Emmaus on the very day of the resurrection. They are discouraged and confused. They had hoped that Yeshua was the One who would redeem Israel, but He has been crucified. There are rumors of an empty tomb, but they don’t know what to do with them.
Yeshua Himself comes alongside them on the road, but they don’t recognize Him at first. He asks what they’re talking about, listens to their summary of events, and then answers with a sharp but loving rebuke:
“Foolish and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken. Was it not necessary for the Messiah to suffer these things and then enter His glory?”
Then He does for them what Rabbi Akiva later does for the sages. He takes them on a scriptural walk:
- Starting with Moses and all the Prophets, He explains how the Scriptures spoke of the Messiah’s suffering and glory.
- In other words, He shows them that His suffering and death are not a failure of the plan but part of the plan the prophets already laid out.
- The “negative” side—rejection, suffering, apparent defeat—had to happen in order for the “positive” side—resurrection, exaltation, and the ultimate restoration of God’s people—to unfold.
Just like Akiva, Yeshua works with a two-part prophetic pattern:
- Judgment/suffering: the Messiah must suffer.
- Comfort/glory: the Messiah then enters His glory.
If the hard half has already been fulfilled (His crucifixion), then the glorious half (His resurrection and future reign) is guaranteed.
The sign that seals this for the two disciples isn’t a fox in the ruins; it’s the breaking of bread. As Yeshua blesses and breaks the bread at table with them, their eyes are opened and they recognize Him. He disappears from their sight, and they say to one another:
“Did not our hearts burn within us while He talked to us on the road, while He opened to us the Scriptures?”
The pattern is the same:
- Visible catastrophe (Yeshua’s death).
- A master interpreter (Yeshua Himself) re-reads it in light of Scripture.
- Fulfilled “judgment” (His suffering) guarantees “glory” (His resurrection and the promises still ahead).
- Despair turns into burning hope, and they immediately turn around and go back to Jerusalem to share the news.
Two Audiences, Two Time Frames
Here is where the story becomes even more prophetic.
First, Yeshua is speaking to His immediate audience: His own disciples, who feel like their entire hope has been shattered. He shows them that:
- They were not wrong to hope in Him as the Redeemer of Israel.
- They were wrong in assuming the Messiah’s story could skip the suffering and go straight to the glory.
- The Scriptures already said the path would run through rejection and death before it reached resurrection and kingdom.
Second, Yeshua is also laying down a pattern for another audience in the near future: Jewish believers who will live through the destruction of the Second Temple about forty years later.
In the same Gospel, Yeshua openly predicts the fall of Jerusalem and the Temple. When that happens, it will look like another total collapse of God’s plan. But the Emmaus story quietly trains His followers in how to live through that as well:
- If God’s warnings about judgment are fulfilled (including the fall of the Second Temple), then His promises of restoration and final redemption are just as certain.
- If the Messiah’s suffering did not cancel His glory but actually led into it, then the Temple’s destruction does not cancel God’s purposes but pushes history toward something greater: the risen Messiah, the outpoured Spirit, and the people of God as a living temple.
Rabbinic Judaism later uses Rabbi Akiva’s fox story to communicate this same sort of hope inside catastrophe: if the prophetic words of ruin have come true, the words of comfort will come true as well.
Luke 24 shows Yeshua doing that kind of work ahead of time, with Himself at the center. The Emmaus road is not just a private counseling session. It is a model for how to read history through Scripture when everything looks like it has fallen apart.
Why This Makes the Emmaus Story Even More Striking
When you know the Akiva story and the prophetic logic behind it, the Road to Emmaus takes on a new depth.
- Yeshua is not simply saying, “Cheer up, I’m alive.”
- He is walking His followers through the same kind of prophetic pattern that Jewish teachers will later use to survive national catastrophe.
- He is training them—and us—to see that fulfilled judgment does not mean God’s promises have failed. It means His word is reliable, and that includes His promises of comfort, rebuilding, resurrection, and glory.
For Christians who may not know the Talmudic story of Rabbi Akiva and the fox, bringing these two narratives side by side doesn’t diminish the uniqueness of Yeshua. It highlights it. Akiva comforts the sages by showing that destruction in the Temple proves future consolation for Jerusalem. Yeshua comforts His disciples by showing that destruction at the cross proves future glory for the Messiah and ultimate hope for Israel and the nations.
In both cases, the people of God are walking through ruins. In both, a teacher opens the Scriptures. In both, the message is the same: if God’s hard words have come true, you can be absolutely sure that His good words will too.
That is how the Emmaus story becomes not only moving, but astonishingly prophetic. Yeshua is speaking to two audiences, in two time frames, and giving both of them a way to walk through disaster with their eyes open, their Bibles open, and their hearts on fire instead of broken.
A Modern Echo: Foxes on the Mount and the Emmaus Pattern Today
This whole pattern isn’t just ancient. It has a strange, modern echo.
In recent years, there have been viral reports and videos of foxes seen around the Western Wall and along the walls of the Temple Mount, often around Tisha B’Av. Religious Jews immediately made the connection to both Scripture and the Akiva story: to Lamentations’ image of foxes on desolate Zion, and to the Talmudic scene where Rabbi Akiva sees a fox in the ruins and insists that fulfilled destruction is proof that consolation and rebuilding are surely coming. For some, these modern foxes have become one more reminder that we are living in “prophecy time,” stirring talk about the end times, a rebuilt Temple, and the coming of the Messiah.
In other words, the same instinct is still alive: you see a sign of desolation on the Mount, and you reach back to the prophets to interpret what it means and where history is going. That is exactly the instinct Yeshua affirms and sharpens on the road to Emmaus. He teaches His disciples to read catastrophic events—His own suffering, the coming fall of the Second Temple, and anything that looks like the collapse of God’s plan—through the full arc of Tanakh: judgment words fulfilled mean comfort words are just as certain.
So the Emmaus story doesn’t just sit in the first century. It speaks into Akiva’s world after 70 CE, and it speaks into ours. Whether it’s a fox on the ruins in the Talmud, a fox on a viral video today, or some future crisis that shakes Jerusalem, the pattern Yeshua models remains the same: don’t stop at the sight of desolation. Walk the road with the Scriptures open, let the Messiah Himself interpret the moment, and let your heart burn with the certainty that if God’s hard words have come true, His promises of rebuilding, resurrection, and final redemption will not fail.
Conclusion
In the end, the Road to Emmaus is more than a touching resurrection story. It is Yeshua Himself modeling how to walk through judgment with Tanakh in hand, reading fulfilled suffering as the down payment on promised glory. When we set His walk beside Rabbi Akiva’s, and even beside modern scenes on the Temple Mount, we see the same invitation: let apparent ruin drive us back into Scripture, back to the Messiah, and forward into a hope that no destruction can overturn.
Epilogue:
The 2019 and 2023 sightings of foxes near Jerusalem's Temple Mount (Western Wall) created a stir among prophecy watchers, as they are seen as the literal fulfillment of the Lamentations 5:18 prophecy: "Because of the mountain of Zion, which is desolate, foxes walk upon it". The appearances, particularly near the fast of Tisha B'Av, are interpreted in Jewish tradition both as a sign of mourning for the destruction of the Temple and, conversely, as a harbinger of future redemption.
IMPORTANT HISTORICAL POINT:
When Was Luke Written—and Why It Matters Here
Most scholars date the Gospel of Luke to somewhere between the early 60s and the late 80s CE, with good arguments on both the slightly earlier and slightly later side of that range. By contrast, the famous story of Rabbi Akiva and the fox on the Temple Mount appears in the Babylonian Talmud, which reached its final form several centuries later, even though it preserves much older traditions about Akiva himself.
The point is not to claim that one side “borrowed” from the other, but to notice that both Luke 24 and the Akiva story are drawing from the same Jewish prophetic pattern: God’s words of judgment are fulfilled, and that very fulfillment becomes the strongest guarantee that His words of consolation, rebuilding, and redemption will also come to pass.























