Monthly Archives: May 2025

Bearing Fruit Amid Conflict

Shalom in His peace. I leave for Israel in a couple of weeks to encourage the staff, share the gospel with Israelis, and lead a tour culminating in the dedication of our new Tel Aviv Messianic Center.  

This has been a long time coming, and frankly, it has not been easy building out a new facility during a war! It has been a challenge to continue our regular ministries of evangelism and discipleship as well. War takes its toll on adults and children, and it is still difficult for Israelis to live in the shadow of October 7, 2023. The loss of lives, sense of security, and trust in the government, as well as the negative response of so many in the West to Israel’s defensive actions in Gaza and southern Lebanon, have caused a sense of hopelessness and fear to fall upon most Israelis.

I am personally thankful for the many Christians who have stood up and supported Israel and opposed growing global antisemitism. This causes me to be so grateful for my brothers and sisters in the Lord!

We are seeing the hearts of many in Israel more open to the Lord than before. When humanity disappoints, we tend to look to heaven for help and power to live a fruitful life, which is what is happening in Israel at this moment in history!

Jesus is the Prince of Peace, yet He was no stranger to conflict from the time of His birth onward, with a band of enemies committed to destroying Him. From the Sanhedrin to the Roman leaders of first-century Israel, Jesus faced controversy after controversy and conflict after conflict.  

Yet, Jesus did not waver in His divine purpose. He said to His disciples that He was ready to face what He knew would be certain death as it was the will of His Father and predicted in Old Testament passages like Isaiah 53. Matthew describes Jesus’s telling His disciples about that suffering, “From that time Jesus began to show His disciples that He must go to Jerusalem, and suffer many things from the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and be raised up on the third day” (Matthew 16:21).

Jesus was more than willing to face danger and potential harm in order to fulfill the divine plan, which called upon Him to suffer for the sins of humanity. 

He was born to die!

Isaiah predicted the Messiah’s humiliating death when he wrote, 

Surely our griefs He Himself bore, and our sorrows He carried; yet we ourselves esteemed Him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. But He was pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; the chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, and by His scourging we are healed. (Isaiah 53:4–5)

Jesus did not deserve this predicted punishment but embraced His calling, bearing our shame and enduring the very judgment for sin that we deserved. Paul writes in 2 Corinthians 5:21, “He made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.

The justice we deserved, He received, and all He earned through His perfect obedience, we received!  

He did not flinch but faced His fate with a deep sense of purpose, knowing He was ordained before the creation of the earth to be our perfect sacrifice. He is our example of how to face the dark moments of life with grace, grit, and determination.  

I see these Jesus-like traits evident in the lives of our Israel staff. For the last 600 days, they have continued in their ministries, raising their children, and bearing the loss of friends and family, and God has blessed their efforts with wonderful fruit.  

Our Israel staff have flourished spiritually post-October 7, 2023, and throughout the ensuing defensive war. The Lord is moving powerfully through them, and there is a hunger for the gospel among Israelis that goes far beyond what we see in times of peace.

We are now finishing the construction of our new Tel Aviv Messianic Center, which is two-and-a-half times the size of our current rental space. We will now have room to grow our ministries to both adults and children, which previously had limitations because of a lack of space. 

AN EXPANDED MINISTRY IN ISRAEL

Concerts

We will continue to have monthly concerts at our new center, but now we will be able to hold more than one hundred people and provide programs for the children while the adults are enjoying the worship. We regularly have Jewish seekers attend these concerts, which also support the growing Messianic music movement within Israel.

Sabbath Dinners

Our Sabbath dinners are evangelistic hubs where believers can bring their not-yet-believing friends and relatives to a warm, friendly, and delicious Sabbath meal. Many young people, including believers serving in the army, have been coming to these dinners. We usually have a speaker, testimonies, and music at these dinners as well. In the new center, we will be able to double the number of people at our Sabbath events.

Bible Studies

We have weekly Bible studies for a general group as well as studies for men and women separately. One of our past hardships was that we were not able to adequately provide a variety of levels of children’s programs, which we will now have the capacity to organize. We are so delighted about this as Israel has a young population—there are a lot of children to serve in the name of Jesus.

Public Lectures

We will now be able to offer gospel-centered topics for both believers and unbelievers in our new space. We now have room for well over one hundred individuals to come and learn about engaging topics from personal finance to child-rearing. We will also be able to provide tools to handle war-related post-traumatic stress. 

We base our public lectures on Scripture, and the topics are so relevant that many people from the community want to attend. 

Youth and Children’s Ministries

We are a family-oriented ministry, and parents enjoy bringing their children to our events. We will have room for graded children’s programs while the adults are involved in other activities at the new center. The Center enables us to expand our ministry among children and helps us better serve their parents. We have the teachers and materials, but we have not had the room—until now.

MORE AND MORE FRUIT!

I am reminded of the words of Jesus our Messiah, our master teacher, who often used everyday illustrations when talking to Jewish people in the first century. The Messiah spoke about vines, vineyards, and fruit, and in John 15, He used these well-known images to explain what it means to walk with God and have an empowered, productive, and joyful relationship with the Lord. 

He said to His disciples,

I am the true vine, and My Father is the vinedresser. Every branch in Me that does not bear fruit, He takes away; and every branch that bears fruit, He prunes it so that it may bear more fruit. (John 15:1–2)

Abide in Me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself unless it abides in the vine, so neither can you unless you abide in Me. I am the vine, you are the branches; he who abides in Me and I in him, he bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do nothing. (John 15:4–5)

He told His disciples to focus on what is inside. The circumstances of life, both on a national and international scale, as well as in our home and family life, deeply impact us, but Jesus encourages the disciples to abide in Him to bear fruit. 

Think with me for a moment about all that Your Mission has endured in the past 131 years of service among the Jewish people. Yet today, we are more fruitful than ever! We battled through the Great Depression, two world wars, the Holocaust, the wars surrounding the establishment of the modern State of Israel, pandemics and plagues, October 7, and a myriad of terrorist attacks on Israel.  

By the grace of God, we still stand. We are reaching more Israelis and Jewish people across the globe than ever before through our evangelistic efforts, hosting networks, digital media campaigns, and one-on-one, heart-to-heart Bible studies and evangelistic conversations. 

God is good, and He will continue to bless as He promised, “My Father is glorified by this, that you bear much fruit, and so prove to be My disciples” (John 15:8).

Thank you for your prayers, love, and generous support as we bring the gospel to Jewish people in the United States, Israel, and in 20 other countries around the world!

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Reaching Jewish Students on College Campuses: A Call to Stand and Serve

College campuses are some of the most spiritually open places in our society. It is no exaggeration to say that many young people, including Jewish students, make life-altering decisions during these formative years. 

A STRATEGIC AND TIMELY OPPORTUNITY

The Jewish student population in the United States exceeds 400,000. New York University (NYU) alone has over 6,000 Jewish undergraduates, making it one of the largest concentrations of Jewish students outside of Israel. Columbia and Barnard College (its affiliated women’s college) are not far behind. Together, they represent a vital mission field. 

THE CRISIS ON CAMPUS: THE GROWTH OF ANTISEMITISM

In recent months, the surge in antisemitic rhetoric and incidents on college campuses has been unprecedented. In the 2023–2024 school year, the Anti-Defamation League recorded over 1,400 antisemitic events linked to higher education institutions—a fivefold increase over the previous year.1 At Columbia, Jewish students have been labeled “Zionist aggressors,” with their photos and names posted publicly. Others have found their dorm room doors vandalized with anti-Israel graffiti. One Columbia student told the press, “I’m scared to wear a Jewish star here.”2 Protesters have stormed campus buildings shouting slogans like “From the river to the sea,” which many Jewish people understand as a call for the eradication of Israel. 

At NYU, students wearing Jewish symbols have been verbally harassed, and one Jewish student was assaulted during a protest. In November, Students for Justice in Palestine organized a rally outside the Stern School of Business that blocked entrances and featured chants praising “resistance” in the name of Gaza. Some students reported being spat on. In another case, flyers were distributed accusing specific students of supporting “genocide” because they expressed pro-Israel views. These incidents have created a climate where many Jewish students feel isolated or afraid to speak. 

Despite national media attention, administrative responses have often lagged and incidents ignored, leaving Jewish students feeling abandoned. The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights has launched investigations into both NYU and Columbia. 

THE TRADITIONAL APPROACH TO JEWISH MINISTRY ON CAMPUS

For many years we have conducted a more traditional approach to Jewish ministry on campus and continue to do so, setting up book tables and trying to start spiritual conversations. God has used these efforts to impact students on campus—especially in the current environment where so many students are exhibiting antisemitic behavior. 

For example, a staff member in Boston gives the following testimony, 

In response to the rise of antisemitism on college campuses, especially in Boston, I felt called to stand with Jewish students. In response to the rise of antisemitism on college campuses, especially in Boston, my team and I set up book tables at Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Boston University, Northeastern, and the University of Massachusetts at Amherst (UMASS-Amherst).

At UMASS, we set up our book table right outside of the student union, and immediately the Lord opened many conversations with Jewish students. At one time I had five Jewish students standing around my table. One student was a regular at the Hillel House [a Jewish student group with chapters nationwide], another girl was more secular, then a young Jewish kid came to join us from Long Island, NY, and finally two more Jewish students joined in — one being from Israel and the other coming from a traditional Jewish home. Each took an evangelistic pamphlet, and two left with a copy of the New Testament, which I always carry with me. 

A RESIDENTIAL MINISTRY TO JEWISH STUDENTS: THE HOUSE OF LIVING WATERS

Hostility toward Jewish students and Israel makes our ministry of on-campus presence more important than ever. The idea is simple but powerful: young adults live in community near a major campus, host regular outreach events, and form deep, personal relationships with Jewish students. In contrast to pop-up evangelism, the House of Living Waters creates stability and trust. The model has proven effective, as the following testimonies from some of the program leaders indicate! 

Henry 

House of Living Waters in the past months has seen extraordinary growth in what can only be understood as the Lord ’s provision. We had an event on the NYU campus, an interfaith Purim party, and students were engaged and desiring more events from our team. We continue to have our Sabbath dinners and Bible study, which has built up a community of believers and not-yet-believers who are excited to see the community provided through the program. We are partnering with many student groups to continue reaching the campus, engaging with students, and building a lasting community within these campuses. 

Sergey 

“So, what is House of Living Waters doing?” This was the question that two rabbis asked me at Rutgers University while we hosted a Purim event on campus. I had an amazing conversation with them about who we are and what we do on campuses, and I told them that we would love to connect in the future and maybe do something together. Please keep praying for our work in Columbia while we establish the ministry there and specifically for our upcoming events with both Jewish and non-Jewish students. 

Charlene 

House of Living Waters has seen incredible growth this school year. We are hopeful about the connections we are building at NYU, and as we launch at Columbia and even Rutgers. It has been an encouragement to see Jewish and non-Jewish students engage with us at our weekly Sabbath dinners and events. At NYU, one student leader said they were happy to partner with us given all the antisemitism and unrest that has been taking place on university campuses. As a result, Christian students are excited about connecting their Jewish friends with us, and Jewish students have shown an interest in our effort to create a community for Jewish-Christian dialogue. 

NYU, COLUMBIA, BARNARD. . . AND TO THE UTTERMOST CAMPUSES!

NYU is not only in the heart of a Jewish population center, but it also houses over twenty active Jewish student organizations. These groups represent not only strategic access points for Jewish engagement but also spiritual battlegrounds where Jewish students are searching for truth. 

Christian groups are present and active as well. At NYU, InterVarsity, CRU, Reformed University Fellowship (RUF), and others have welcomed partnership with our House of Living Waters team. We are working to strengthen collaboration with these groups so they can more confidently reach out to their Jewish friends and classmates. We hope to begin a House of Living Waters program at Columbia in the fall. 

A SNAPSHOT OF OUR OUTREACH

Evangelism: The men at our current House of Living Waters program based at NYU engage students in dorms, coffee shops, and at public events. Through partnerships with CRU, InterVarsity, RUF, and others, our staff are invited into conversations with Christian students who long to reach their Jewish friends. 

Sabbath Dinners: These are the heartbeat of the program. Every week, students come for a home-cooked meal, warm conversation, and spiritual reflection. These Friday evening meals and Bible studies often lead to further questions about the Messiah and what it means to be Jewish and believe in Jesus. 

Discipleship: Those who serve as part of the House of Living Waters are often recent college graduates themselves, so this wonderful outreach program also serves as a powerful tool of training and discipleship for this next-generation team of dedicated, Jesus-focused young adults. The team members are trained in apologetics, theology, and pastoral care, with ongoing personal mentorship by more experienced Chosen People Ministries staff. 

FUTURE PLANS AND THE CALL TO MULTIPLY

We believe God is calling us to replicate the House of Living Waters in other strategic university cities: Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, and Toronto—to name a few. Each city has a dense Jewish population and major university presence. With the success we have seen at NYU and growing relationships at Columbia and Rutgers, we are eager to build. Each participant receives a stipend each month and free housing in exchange for a year-long commitment to outreach and discipleship. Their week includes a Friday night Sabbath dinner, Bible studies, Jewish holiday celebrations, and strategic evangelism. 

Thanks for caring and for building the future of Jewish evangelism on campus together with Your Mission to the Jewish People.

  1. “Anti-Israel Activism on U.S. Campuses, 2023-2024,” ADL, updated February 7, 2025, https://www.adl.org/re-sources/report/anti-israel-activism-us-campuses-2023-2024.
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  2. Ali Bauman and Christina Fan, “Columbia University Protesters Taken into Custody after Day of Unrest on Campus,” CBS News, updated on April 18, 2024, https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/columbia-university-pro-palestinian-pro-israeli-protests/. ↩︎

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