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THE
SITUATION IN THE MIDDLE EAST
by Thomas Ice
Any
time Israel becomes involved in a war in the Middle East many people, including
some non-Christians, want to know if it is in any way related to Bible
prophecy. My answer is always Òyes and no.Ó ÒYes,Ó since just about any
geo-political event involving Israel relates to Bible prophecy in some kind of
stage-setting way. On the other hand, Òno,Ó since almost all end-time Bible
prophecy relating to Israel will not start to be fulfilled until after the rapture,
during the seven-year tribulation period. Every time something happens in the
Middle East relating to Israel it certainly causes me to wonder even more,
ÒIsnÕt the rapture about to take place?Ó
STAGE SETTING
The
rapture is a signless event. There are no signs leading up to the rapture, it
could take place at any moment. There are currently signs in the world that God
is preparing for events that will take place after the rapture during the
tribulation period. This scenario views current events as increasingly setting
the stage for end-time events, even though they will not commence during the
current church age. Such a model allows a pretribulational futurist to see the
rapture as imminent (could happen at any moment with no intervening events required
to occur), but at the same time believe that we could be the last generation of
the church age. John Walvoord has noted:
In the present world scene there are many indications
pointing to the conclusion that the end of the age may soon be upon us. These
prophecies relating to IsraelÕs coming day of suffering and ultimate
restoration may be destined for fulfillment in the present generation. Never
before in the history of the world has there been a confluence of major
evidences of preparation for the end. (1)
Stage-setting
is not the ÒfulfillmentÓ of Bible prophecy. So while prophecy is not being
fulfilled in our day, it does not follow that we cannot track Ògeneral trendsÓ
in current preparation for the coming tribulation, especially since it
immediately follows the rapture. We call this approach Òstage-setting.Ó Just as
many people set their clothes out the night before they wear them the following
day, so in the same sense is God preparing the world for the certain
fulfillment of prophecy in a future time.
Dr.
Walvoord explains:
But
if there are no signs for the Rapture itself, what are the legitimate grounds
for believing that the Rapture could be especially near of this generation?
The
answer is not found in any prophetic events predicted before the Rapture but in
understanding the events that will follow the Rapture. Just as history was
prepared for ChristÕs first coming, in a similar way history is preparing for
the events leading up to His Second Coming. . . . If this is the case, it leads
to the inevitable conclusion that the Rapture may be excitingly near. (2)
BUILDUP TO THE TRIBULATION
I
believe that the current War in the Middle East is a buildup to the start of
the tribulation when Israel will enter into a covenant with the antichrist of
the Revived Roman Empire (Isa. 28:18; Dan. 9:24–27). The first three and
a half years of the tribulation are a time in which the antichrist will promise
to protect the nation of Israel. We know that after setting up his image in the
rebuilt Temple in the middle of the seven-year period that he will persecute
that nation (Rev. 12). We also know that all the nations of the world will be
against Israel during the tribulation (Zech. 12-14), which is why they gather
against Israel at the Campaign of Armageddon (Joel 2-3; Rev. 16:16). Thus, we
can see increasingly today that because of the current situation the world
increasingly is turning against GodÕs regathered people-Israel. How is this
happening?
For
a brief understanding of how the Middle East got to where it is today I need to
do a quick survey of its history. If you begin with the rise of Islam in the
seventh century we see that Mohammad and his established a militant religion
whoÕs goal became the conquest of the world. Islam took over the entire Arabian
Peninsula and began spreading out from there. As Dave Hunt has noted: ÒIslam
divides the entire world into Dar al-Islam (the house of peace) and Dar al-Harb
(the house of war) and demands perpetual jihad everywhere against Dar al-Harb,
i.e., non-Muslims. There can never be ÔpeaceÕ until Islam has subjected the
entire world to Allah.Ó (3) This explains the militancy of Islam today as it
pursues global conquest.
Devout
Muslims do not believe that there should be nations within Dar al-Islam.
Mohammad had a single empire and this is why great leaders throughout Islamic
history have been the ones who have unified Islam under a single empire. This
was accomplished by Saladin (around 1,000 A.D.) and later the Turks (around
1500 A.D.).
The
nineteenth century saw a steep decline in the Ottoman Empire and it finally
fell in World War I when the British and French conquered it. After World War I
the British and French divided up the former Ottoman Empire into the
nation-states that we have today. Oil had just come onto the world scene and
the Europeans did not want any particular Arab state to have too much oil so
they chopped up many into very small countries.
To
the religious Muslim, the division of Dar al-Islam by the British and French
was seen as a disruptive influence from the Western Imperialist Crusader and
something that needs to be remedied. Devout Muslims not only believed that Dar
al-Islam had been artificially divided by the infidel, they also tended to see
their new leaders as corrupt representatives of the Crusader who were only
interested in Arab oil. Thus, the goal for many Muslims was to try to reunite
Dar al-Islam into a single empire so that global conquest could resume. This
was the goal of Nasser of Egypt in the 50s and 60s. Saddam Hussein envisioned
just such an empire when he started his war with Iran and then invaded Kuwait.
Now Iran has its sights set on recreating Dar al-Islam as it pursues conquest
through gaining nuclear technology and by destabilizing the Middle East through
its proxies Hezbollah and Hamas.
Iran
is the power behind this current war. They have a plan to take over the Muslim
world and if they are able to do it then they will control much of the worldÕs
oil and would have the income and manpower in which to build a powerful army in
order to destroy Israel, America and take over the rest of the world. Their
first goal is to reunite as much of the Islamic Empire as possible in order to
launch the Islamic goal of world domination. Benjamin Netanyahu, when ask what
he thought is IranÕs goals, said the following:
I
think this is a test-fire, test-firing of rockets into a Western country. Iran
is committed to the destruction of Israel. It denies the Holocaust while
preparing a new Holocaust. But Iran is also committed to a demented branch of
Shiism which sees an apocalyptic war of millions of casualties in which Shiism
will rise and the West will go down. We may be the first target, but we're not
the last target. The other kind of fanaticism we witnessed 60 years ago,
Nazism, also tried to arm itself with atomic weapons. These mad militancies
start with attacks on the Jews, but they never end there. And ultimately the
target is our free civilization. (4)
Israel
has liberals running their nation at this time in Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
and Defense Minister Amir Peretz and they are notorious for using underwhelming
force when overwhelming force is required. Israel, in spite of possessing a
great military, have not used it properly in their war with Hezbollah. This
sets the stage for Israel to need outside protection and the motive for
entering into an agreement with the antichrist. It would not be surprising to
see the United States come out of this situation as a diminished Middle East
broker and see the European Union step in to take our place. A war weary Israel
is increasingly ripe for entering into the Òcovenant with deathÓ (Isa. 28:18)
that will kick off the tribulation. If we are approaching the tribulation then
that means that the rapture is even closer.
ISAIAH 17 AND DAMASCUS
Some
are wondering if Òthe oracle concerning Damascus,Ó where that Syrian city will
be forever destroyed (Isa. 17:1ff) could occur if Syria were to enter this
conflict. No doubt with IsraelÕs nuclear weapons they could certainly wipe
Damascus off of the map. However, I do not believe that such a thing will
happen in conjunction with this current Middle Eastern war, if one carefully
reads Isaiah 17. Isaiah, chapters 13 through 23 speak of GodÕs judgments
against Babylon, Egypt, Tyre, Ethiopia and many other cities and countries.
These judgments appear to take place when God judges the whole world, which we
know from many Old Testament passages will take place during the tribulation
and at the second coming of Christ. Further, Isaiah 24 through 26 is a major
section about the tribulation period in which God will judge all Òthe
inhabitants of the earthÓ (Isa. 24:1, 6, 17; 26:9, 18, 21). Thus, it makes more
sense to see this cluster of prophesies in Isaiah 13 through 26 as taking place
after the rapture and during the tribulation. Having said all of that, it is
very clear that momentous events are taking place that appear to be preparing
the world for the last days-the last days known as the tribulation. Even in
these troubled times our hope remains the blessed hope of ChristÕs return in
the clouds to rapture His church. Are you ready? Maranatha!
ENDNOTES
1.
John F. Walvoord, Israel in Prophecy (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1962), p.
129.
2.
John F. Walvoord, Armageddon, Oil and the Middle East Crisis, revised (Grand Rapids: Zondervan
Publishing House, 1990), p. 217.
3.
Dave Hunt, Judgment Day! Islam, Israel and the Nations, expanded second edition (Bend, OR:
The Berean Call, 2006), p. 188.
4.
Benjamin Netanyahu, as quoted in an interview with Kenneth Timmerman on
Newsmax.com (August 2, 2006) http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2006/8/1/132039.shtml?s=lh.
Source:
http://www.pre-trib.org/pdf/Ice-TheSituationinTheMid.pdf