TRAIN WRECK: Biden, Schumer Putting US-Israeli Relations on a Collision Course

From allisrael.com

By Joel C. Rosenberg

Biden is cursing Netanyahu and demanding Israel not finish Hamas off in Rafah

DALLAS, TEXAS — The state of U.S.-Israeli relations is rapidly deteriorating.

And senior American Democrats are to blame.

Let me explain.

First, some context.

I’m in Dallas this week as part of a six-week media and speaking tour across the United States.

At churches and conferences, in meetings with pastors and other Evangelical leaders, and during various radio and TV interviews, I’ve been explaining the Hamas invasion of Oct. 7 and the horrific and painful war that we Israelis find ourselves in, and answering a wide range of questions.

During the “Chris Krok Show” on Sunday night on WBAP — the powerhouse Dallas radio station that’s heard in 38 states — I was asked to comment on U.S. President Joe Biden and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer openly and viciously attacking Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the midst of a hot war.

I didn’t hold back.

Biden is attacking Netanyahu behind closed doors with vulgar and obscene language, and White House aides are leaking those diatribes to the mainstream media.

Biden is also demanding that Netanyahu stop prosecuting the war against Hamas, telling the prime minister in a phone call that he will not support Israel invading the city of Rafah, the southernmost city in the Gaza Strip and the last stronghold of Hamas leaders and terrorists.

If this weren’t bad enough, Schumer is publicly attacking Netanyahu as the main “obstacle to peace” in Israel, saying that Netanyahu has “lost his way,” and calling for immediate elections in Israel to get rid of the prime minister.

U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) speaks during a press conference following the weekly Senate caucus luncheons on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 12, 2024. (Photo: REUTERS/Craig Hudson/File Photo)

HEADING FOR A TRAIN WRECK

All of this is shameful, I said, and setting U.S.-Israeli relations on a collision course.

“The good news is that Israel is absolutely winning this war in terms of the military conflict,” I told Chris.

“We have defeated about 20 of Hamas’ 24 brigades. We have taken out most, but not quite all, of their terrorist leaders, and we’ve rescued or persuaded Hamas to give up and give back almost half of our hostages.”

“But we are losing the battle for public opinion. And part of the reason is because of President Biden and Senate Majority Leader Schumer, who keep attacking the prime minister of Israel as being dangerous and irresponsible when we’re fighting a bloodthirsty, genocidal enemy.”

“That is not helpful,” I noted. “It is not helpful for an American president and Senate majority leader to throw a democratically-elected leader under the bus during a war.”

Indeed, such attacks on Israel’s government could lead to a “train wreck” in relations between Jerusalem and Washington.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with United States President Joe Biden in Tel Aviv, October 18, 2023.(Photo: Miriam Alster/Flash90)

REPREHENSIBLE CALLS FOR REGIME CHANGE IN ISRAEL 

I’m outraged by Biden’s effort to stop Israel from going into Rafah and finishing the job of defeating Hamas once and for all.

And I’m just as outraged by Schumer’s demand for regime change in Israel.

“Look, what the Senate Majority leader has done is absolutely reprehensible,” I told Chris Krok on the air.

“I mean, for the highest-ranking leader in the Senate — also the highest-ranking elected Jewish official in American history — to denounce the government of Israel and call for regime change in Israel, a democratically elected ally that’s in a fight for our lives against Iranian terror proxies, is crazy.”

“Has Senator Chuck Schumer called for regime change in Russia? How about bringing Xi Jinping down in China? Is Schumer calling for regime change in Iran? No, he’s calling for regime change in Israel.”

“He’s saying that the prime minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, is dangerous, reckless, irresponsible, and needs to be removed immediately.”

“This is just plain wrong.”

“Okay, let’s say Schumer has honest policy disagreements [with Netanyahu],” I added. “Fine. Every Israeli has a policy disagreement with the prime minister of Israel. But a superpower does not condemn the democratically elected government of an ally during a hot war. A superpower doesn’t call for the government of an ally to resign and for regime change in the middle of a hot war.”

“It’s just insane what Schumer is doing. And it shows the dangerous forces going on inside the Democratic Party that they can’t even stand with Israel 100% until victory.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks with with an AIPAC leadership delegation in Jerusalem, March 18, 2024 (Photo: Ma’ayan Toaff/GPO)

ISRAELI ELECTIONS WILL COME AT THE PROPER TIME

I noted that “there will be elections in Israel” at the proper time because “Netanyahu, honestly, has a lot to account for because he did preside over the worst massacre of Jews on one day since the Holocaust. And the Israeli people will have an election, and Netanyahu will have to defend his record. He’s done so many other good things that everything will get weighed together. And he may not last. I don’t know. But I know that it’s not the place of a Senate majority leader to attack an ally in wartime.”

Worse, I added, is that Schumer’s 47-minute attack on Netanyahu on the Senate floor was immediately praised by Biden.

“Biden is the one behind all this and has praised Schumer,” I said.

U.S. President Joe Biden looks on while delivering remarks in Las Vegas, Nevada, March 19, 2024. (Photo: REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)

HOW ARE ISRAELIS REACTING TO BIDEN AND SCHUMER’S ATTACKS?

Chris asked me how Israelis are reacting.

“Well, overall, I think Israelis are shocked that an American president and the Senate majority leader, who is Jewish, would trash and so publicly denounce an Israeli prime minister, whatever his party, whatever his background, in the middle of a war.”

“You know, Benny Gantz used to be the opposition leader in Israel. He’s a former defense minister in Israel. He’s a former chief of staff of the Israeli Defense Forces. So, a real national security expert. But shortly after October 7, when Israel was invaded by 3,000 Hamas terrorists — within just, I think, 48 or maybe 72 hours — Netanyahu reached out to Benny Gantz and asked,: ‘Can we form an emergency unity government? We don’t agree on everything, but we agree we have to win. And I want you on my team.’ And Gantz, to his credit, said yes.”

Minister Benny Gantz speaking at a press conference with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, at the Ministry of Defense, in Tel Aviv, November 22, 2023. (Photo: Chaim Goldberg/Flash90)

“So, what did Gantz say about Schumer and Biden? He criticized those Democratic leaders, saying their criticisms were inappropriate.”

“Now, obviously, Gantz wants to be the prime minister at some point. And right now the polls show that he would be the prime minister if elections were held tomorrow. But he does not want American leaders to be interfering in Israel’s democratic process. What he wants is what every Israeli wants — we want 100% U.S backing for us to win, and then we’ll have an election and figure out how to go forward.”

 O’Biden is just making sure that America is CURSED and DESTROYED.

KEEP YOUR EYES ON YESHUA!

HOW CAN I BE SAVED?

FOR MY JEWISH PEOPLE: ISAIAH 53 – THE FORBIDDEN CHAPTER

From oneforisrael.org

Long ago the rabbis used to read Isaiah 53 in synagogues, but after the chapter caused arguments and great confusion the rabbis decided that the simplest thing would be to just take that prophecy out of the Haftarah readings in synagogues.1 That’s why today when we read Isaiah 52, we stop in the middle of the chapter and the week after we jump straight to Isaiah 54.

What happened to Isaiah 53, you might be wondering? That is exactly what this article is about.

In the Bible, in the book of Isaiah, chapter 53, the prophet prophesies about the Messiah—that he would be rejected by his people, that he would suffer and die in agony, and that God would see his suffering and death as an atonement for the sins of humanity. Isaiah lived and prophesied about 700 BCE. According to his prophecy in chapter 53 the leaders of Israel would recognize they had made a mistake at the end of days when they rejected the Messiah, so Isaiah put the prophecy in past tense and because he saw himself as part of the people of Israel he used first person plural (we).

AT THE END OF CHAPTER 52 ISAIAH WRITES AN INTRODUCTION TO ISAIAH 53:

“Behold, my servant shall prosper…” 

The term “servant” is supposed to connect back to sections earlier in the book that speak of “the Servant of the Lord” (for example, in chapters 42, 49 and 50, where the Messiah is described as a servant that suffers).

“He will be high and lifted up and greatly exalted.”

This is to emphasize the eminence of the Messiah who would in fact rise from the dead, and ascend to the heavens and sit next to the Father.  His actions would give him a higher status that every human king or ruler. 

“Just as many were appalled at You—His appearance was disfigured more than any man, His form more than the sons of men.”

Before the Messiah is exalted he would suffer and be humiliated. His body would be abused and tortured so badly that he would be completely disfigured and unrecognizable.

“So He will sprinkle many nations. Kings will shut their mouths because of Him, for what had not been told them they will see, and what they had not heard they will perceive.”

Despite the horrific suffering the day would come when even kings would come to look to him with reverence.

AND NOW, LET’S DIVE INTO CHAPTER 53 ITSELF…

“Who has believed our report?”

This is describing the lack of faith among the people of Israel who don’t believe what they’ve heard.

“To whom is the arm of Adonai revealed?”

Isaiah calls the Messiah the “Arm of the Lord”. Earlier, in chapter 40 Isaiah declares that the “Arm of the Lord” would rule for him. In chapter 51 the gentiles put their hope in the “Arm of the Lord”, and the “Arm of the Lord” would redeem. In chapter 52 the “Arm of the Lord” brings salvation. Now, in 53, Isaiah reveals to us that the “Arm of the Lord” is in fact the Messiah. The Messiah is very much part of God himself.

For He grew up before Him like a tender shoot,
   like a root out of dry ground.
He had no form or majesty that we should look at Him,
nor beauty that we should desire Him.

He was a shoot in spiritually dry ground – there had been no word from God for 400 years. 

THE MEANING OF ISAIAH 53 IN THE SCRIPTURE

“He had no beauty that we should desire Him”.

He was not appealing to us. We didn’t want him. His appearance wasn’t particularly glorious or impressive, and the way he showed up didn’t cause people to desire him. In contrast to what rabbinic Halacha teaches today, according to this prophecy, the Messiah would not be born to a prestigious rabbinic family or grow up in the grand residences of wealthy rabbis. We can say with near certainty that the external appearance of the Messiah was nothing extraordinary at all.

He was despised and rejected by men,
a man of sorrows, acquainted with grief,
One from whom people hide their faces.
He was despised, and we did not esteem Him.

The life of the Messiah was characterized by pain, rejection and suffering. He didn’t get the honor due to the Messiah, but was despised and rejected by the leaders of his people. We considered him some kind of social misfit – someone we might hide our faces from when we pass someone on the street that we are embarrassed to see.
We didn’t think he was the Messiah. We didn’t even register it could be him.

Surely He has borne our griefs
   and carried our pains.
Yet we esteemed Him stricken,
   struck by God, and afflicted.

The Messiah suffered in our place – he carried our sicknesses, our suffering, our pain… and the sins we committed, while our people – while we – thought he was being punished, and that his suffering was God’s punishment for sins that he himself had committed. We didn’t understand that it was for OUR sin.

But He was pierced because of our transgressions,
crushed because of our iniquities.
The chastisement for our shalom was upon Him,
and by His stripes we are healed.

The Hebrew says wounded, pierced. He died. Like someone who has fallen wounded, or someone perforated with bullets – not for any fault of his own, but it was our wrongdoing. He was crushed because of our inequities, our sins – the punishment and discipline we deserved went to him. The “stripes” are hard blows that leave marks, and by his scars we are healed. In exactly this way, hundreds of years later, the prophecy was fulfilled. Yeshua was went to the cross in order to take the death we deserved.

We all like sheep have gone astray.
Each of us turned to his own way.
So Adonai has laid on Him the iniquity of us all.

The Hebrew talks of going astray like sheep wander off and get lost. We all, people of Israel, ignored him and went on our way, but despite this, God put all our sin and iniquity on him – on the Messiah.

He was oppressed and He was afflicted
yet He did not open His mouth.
Like a lamb led to the slaughter,
like a sheep before its shearers is silent,
so He did not open His mouth.

The Hebrew says he was exploited, abused… his dignity and right to a fair trial were taken from him. The Hebrew says he was afflicted – tortured – but he didn’t open his mouth. This shows that he did not resist his unjust sentence. He didn’t try to rebel or escape, and he didn’t take legal representation in spite of the fact he was facing a death sentence, but he was led like a sheep to the slaughter, or to be sheared without resisting the injustices being done to him.

Because of oppression and judgment He was taken away.
As for His generation, who considered?
For He was cut off from the land of the living,
for the transgression of my people—
the stroke was theirs.

They arrested him and took him to trial. As a result of the trial he was “cut off from the land of the living”. A death sentence. Not for his own crimes, but those of his people. In the Scriptures, “My people” always means the people of Israel. The Messiah would die not for his own sin but for the sin of his people – the people who should be taking the punishment for their own sins – but the Messiah took it upon himself. He is the one who died.

His generation wouldn’t care to bring him up in conversation, but would rather sweep his existence under the carpet. So for the last 2000 years, Yeshua the Messiah has been the best kept secret in Judaism, and this is precisely why he was labelled “Yeshu” in Judaism, which stands for “May his name and memory be blotted out”.

His grave was given with the wicked,
and by a rich man in His death,
though He had done no violence,
nor was there any deceit in His mouth.

Even though he was taken out to be executed like a criminal, even though he did nothing wrong, and never lied, in his death he was to be buried in the fancy tomb of a rich man. Yeshua really was killed on the cross and was buried in the grave of a rich man a member of the Sanhedrin, Joseph of Arimathea. It’s a clear symbol of the ironic situation in which the Messiah receives honor for the noblest deed of them all – taking the death sentence we deserve on himself.

Yet it pleased Adonai to bruise Him.
He caused Him to suffer.
If He makes His soul a guilt offering,
He will see His offspring, He will prolong His days,
and the will of Adonai will succeed by His hand.

So who is responsible for the death of the Messiah? “The Jews”? As so many Catholics have accused us of in the past? Maybe the Romans? They were the ones who actually crucified him? No. 
“God was pleased to bruise him”. God is the only one able to forgive and bring salvation to the world and he turned himself into a sacrifice. What kind of sacrifice? A guilt offering. The death of the Messiah was no accident – God used his own stiff-necked people as priests in order to bring about the forgiveness of sins not only for his people Israel, but for the whole of humanity. In contrast to the Yom Kippur sacrifice which was only valid until the following year and just ‘covered over’ sin, the atonement of the Messiah took away our sin once and for all! None of us as human beings are perfect – we are not able to be that perfect sacrifice. Only God himself could do that.
After that comes a very interesting statement:

“He will see His offspring, He will prolong His days,”

In spite of the fact he would be killed, he would also prolong his days. He would rise again from the dead and would see the “fruit of his seed”, planted in his resurrection. By the way, we also have a video on the resurrection of Yeshua.

As a result of the anguish of His soul
He will see it and be satisfied by His knowledge.
The Righteous One, My Servant will make many righteous
   and He will bear their iniquities.

The Messiah would see and be satisfied by his labor, because many would be made righteous by the suffering he endured, as a righteous man when he took on himself the sins and iniquities of many. All who recognize him as the Messiah will be his “seed” in a spiritual sense.

Therefore I will give Him a portion with the great,
and He will divide the spoil with the mighty—
because He poured out His soul to death,
   and was counted with transgressors.
For He bore the sin of many,
   and interceded for the transgressors.

The Messiah was the one interceding for us an advocate for us as sinners before a holy God. The Messiah took on his shoulders the sin of all who believe in him. It’s an encouraging prophecy of hope and a future. God is not just interested in forgiveness expressed in words but also demonstrated in actions. That’s why he took on the appearance of a servant and took the punishment that we deserve on himself.

SHALOM B’YESHUA!

HOW CAN I BE SAVED?