Category Archives: Church Planting

Two Years Later: Reflections on October 7 and Our Mission in Israel

As we mark two years since that devastating morning of October 7, 2023, I find myself reflecting not just on the horror of that day, but on what it means to love Israel—both as a Jewish person and as a believer in the Jewish Messiah, Yeshua (Jesus).

A Personal Connection to the Land

I grew up looking at pictures on my grandmother’s wall of relatives I would never meet—family members slaughtered in the Holocaust. So for me, as for so many other Jewish people, Israel represented something profound: a Jewish homeland rising from the ashes of our people’s greatest tragedy.

Now, as a Jewish believer in Yeshua, I feel more connected than ever to the land where He walked, taught, and gave His life. As a lover of Israel, my heart is heavy this month, two years since Hamas’s barbaric massacre in Israel on October 7, 2023. More than a thousand terrorists invaded the country, slaughtered more than 1,200 people, and took 251 as hostages.

The Current Reality: Numbers That Break Our Hearts

The statistics from October 7 and its aftermath paint a devastating picture:[1]

Hostages:

  • 251 precious souls taken hostage on October 7
  • 148 released through exchanges (8 of these are deceased)
  • 49 bodies retrieved by Israeli forces
  • 8 hostages rescued alive
  • 50 remain in captivity—Israel believes 28 are deceased
  • Among those still held, 2 people are from Thailand, 1 from Tanzania (confirmed dead), and 1 from Nepal
  • 4 additional hostages have been held since before the October 7 attack

Military Casualties:

  • 898 Israeli soldiers killed since October 7 in the Gaza war
  • 70 police officers killed
  • 329 (of the total number of Israeli soldiers killed since October 7) died on the Gaza border during Hamas’s initial assault
  • 454 (of the total number of Israeli soldiers killed since October 7) were killed during ground operations in Gaza
  • 80 soldiers and officers killed in operations with Hezbollah and other terror groups
  • Additional casualties from West Bank operations, Iranian attacks, and tragic accidents

Each number represents a family forever changed, dreams cut short, and futures stolen by Hamas and their Iranian backers.

Visiting the Places Where Evil Struck

This past June, I led a dedication tour of Israel with more than sixty supporters to inaugurate our new Messianic center in the Tel Aviv area. Part of our journey included visiting the sites where so much innocent blood was spilled.

In Sderot, we learned that Hamas infiltrated this border city through 191 points of entry, killing about fifty civilians and taking over the police station for twenty hours. This was a city where residents had regularly driven Palestinians to Israeli hospitals for medical care; Hamas destroyed this bridge of compassion with their brutality.

At the Nova Music Festival memorial site, we stood where nearly 4,000 young people had gathered for a weekend of music and friendship. Instead of a celebration, 400 beautiful souls were murdered in cold blood. The memorial displays dozens of photos and stories of students, artists, and dreamers who were mowed down while they were just seeking joy through music and community.

The “car graveyard” hit many of us hardest of all. We saw hundreds of civilian vehicles, twisted and burned, bearing bullet holes aimed deliberately at the people inside. These were not military targets but families simply going about their Saturday morning when Hamas terrorists opened fire indiscriminately.

When the War Came to Our New Center

Our tour took an unexpected turn when tensions escalated between Israel and Iran. After Israel struck Iranian nuclear facilities, Iran retaliated with ballistic missiles and drones. On the morning of June 19, while we were evacuating our tour group through Jordan (since all airlines had canceled flights out of Israel), we heard air raid sirens as missiles flew overhead toward Israel. Moments later, we received devastating news: Our brand-new, recently dedicated Messianic center had been hit by an Iranian ballistic missile.

It broke my heart to learn that the missile severely damaged the condo building that houses our new ministry center in a two-story, ground-level commercial space. However, we are grateful to report the structure is still sound.

Our former rented center directly across the street, which lost all its windows in the blast, has now been repaired. We renewed our lease for another year, allowing us to continue our ministry while completing the repairs to the new center.

Ministry amid Crisis

Even in the chaos, God opened doors for ministry. When we evacuated to Amman, Jordan (our only choice at the time), the hotel where we were staying filled 110 rooms with displaced families, including 100 children whose homes in the Tel Aviv suburb, Petach Tikva, took some direct hits from Iranian missiles and became unlivable. Our Israeli staff immediately sprang into action, organizing games and crafts for the children, providing hygiene products, and offering comfort to traumatized families.

As one staff member wrote, “We sense we are in this hotel for such a time as this. The children are very stressed by the alerts as they now really know from personal experience what can actually happen.” Through art supplies and listening ears, our team ministered to families who had lost everything, showing them God’s love in their darkest hour.

The Heart of the Conflict

What we witnessed reinforced a fundamental truth: This conflict is not simply about land or politics. It is a clash between those who sanctify life and those who worship death. Hamas, backed and funded by Iran, has shown its members value terrorism and destruction over the welfare of their own people. While Israel goes to extraordinary lengths to protect civilian life, Hamas deliberately uses Palestinian civilians as human shields to stay in power.

My heart aches for innocent Palestinians caught in this nightmare. They deserve leaders who build schools instead of tunnels, who seek prosperity instead of destruction, who choose hope over hatred. The tragedy is that Hamas and Iran have stolen their future just as surely as they have tried to steal the same from Israel.

We pray for and grieve for the innocent on both sides who have lost loved ones and for those who are no longer able to live in their homes, like those who lived in the apartments above our new center and who will not be able to get back into their homes for at least a year.

We do believe there is a food shortage in Gaza, which needs to be resolved, but reject the reasons proffered by many blaming Israel for these terrible circumstances. Hamas is at the root of the suffering in Gaza—not Israel, which is now the position of many of Israel’s Arab neighbors.[2]

How You Can Help

Despite the ongoing pain and the damage to our center, we refuse to let terror win. Where Hamas brought destruction, we choose to build. Where they spread hatred, we choose to remember love. Where they celebrated death, we choose to sanctify life.

We also desperately need your prayers. Pray for our staff ministering to traumatized families, for the return of the remaining hostages, comfort for their families, for wisdom in rebuilding, and for the peace of Jerusalem.

Together, we can ensure that the voices of those silenced on October 7 continue to be honored—not for revenge, but for remembrance; not for hatred, but for healing; not for despair, but for the hope found only through Jesus, Israel’s promised Messiah and the Savior of the world.

Thank you for standing with us in our ministry among His chosen people.


[1] These numbers are accurate at the time of writing this letter, but may change by the time you receive it.

[2] Jacob Magid, et al., “In 1st, Entire Arab League Condemns Oct. 7, Urges Hamas to Disarm, at 2-State Confab,” Times of Israel, July 30, 2025, https://www.timesofisrael.com/in-1st-entire-arab-league-condemns-oct-7-urges-hamas-to-disarm-at-2-state-solution-confab/.

You can find further information at the Coalition Against Antisemitism (opposeantisemitism.com).

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Hope in Suffering

Fall is coming. You can feel it in the air. The growing chill of fall brings with it the Jewish high holidays. The Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur), preceded by the Jewish New Year (Rosh Hashanah), is right around the corner. As a Jewish believer in Jesus, I believe each one of these festivals points to Jesus and that He not only fulfills each festival in remarkable ways but He also observed every one of them—perfectly. But because of His perfection, He met the righteous standards demanded by the Law.

Jesus was perfect and the only person qualified to be our sin-bearer. He is a perfect sacrifice . . . He is God in the flesh.

Isaiah wrote, “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. All of us like sheep have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way; but the Lord has caused the iniquity of us all to fall on Him”(Isaiah 53:5–6).

He died so that we can live and enjoy freedom, forgiveness, and salvation through His death and resurrection.

He made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him”(2 Corinthians 5:21)!

For millennia, our Jewish people sought atonement in many ways, but as a nation, we failed to seriously consider the possibility that Jesus was our Messiah. Some of this had to do with the way institutional Christianity treated the Jewish people throughout history, which turned the average Jewish person off to Jesus. But thank God this is changing, as many Jewish people today are beginning to turn to Him! Your Mission to the Jewish People is responding to this new openness to the gospel on the part of Jewish people in the United States, Israel, and across the globe.

For 131 years, we have been preaching the same gospel, including the perfection of His person and the redeeming power of His death and resurrection for men and women, enabling Jewish people and Gentiles to find salvation by trusting in Him and Him alone for the forgiveness of sin! 

As the author of Hebrews wrote:

But when Christ appeared as a high priest of the good things to come, He entered through the greater and more perfect tabernacle, not made with hands, that is to say, not of this creation; and not through the blood of goats and calves, but through His own blood, He entered the holy place once for all, having obtained eternal redemption. (Hebrews 9:11–12)

I love the high holiday season because it reminds me anew of the significance of the atonement, as well as the urgency and necessity of preaching the gospel to the Jewish people. We continue to serve because of your faithfulness and generous support in more than twenty North American cities and twenty countries around the globe.

Thank you for your partnership and love for the Jewish people and our staff.

The Message of the Gospel is Often Wrapped in Flesh

Jesus lived the message He preached and calls upon us to do the same. Have you ever thought of suffering as a means of preaching the gospel? There is great spiritual power in our suffering! Jesus demonstrated this, the apostles followed suit, and so did the early Christian martyrs. Suffering is one way God reveals His grace and power—especially when we follow His example and suffer with grace.

The apostle Peter understood this when he wrote,

Beloved, do not be surprised at the fiery ordeal among you, which comes upon you for your testing, as though some strange thing were happening to you; but to the degree that you share the sufferings of Christ, keep on rejoicing, so that also at the revelation of His glory you may rejoice with exultation. If you are reviled for the name of Christ, you are blessed, because the Spirit of glory and of God rests on you. (1 Peter 4:12–14)

Our suffering is not redemptive and cannot take away sin, but it does empower our witness to the One who can.

As the apostle Paul declared, one of his deepest desires was, “That I may know Him and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death”(Philippians 3:10).

Identifying with the Sufferings of Jesus: A Testimony from Tel Aviv

Seventy of us recently learned this powerful spiritual lesson firsthand on a recent trip to Israel. We had the privilege of identifying with the Lord and the Jewish people through suffering, and to a person, we all agree that it was a great privilege to have the experience.

Let me tell you the story.

On June 14, 2025, after several nights together in a bomb shelter alongside other guests and hotel staff, we dedicated our new Messianic Center in Ramat Gan, a suburb of Tel Aviv. Just days later, on June 19, our beautiful new center was struck by an Iranian ballistic missile—an event that deeply marked our ministry, our staff, and our Mission. While we are grateful that no lives were lost, the physical damage to our center and surrounding buildings is significant. Yet, we believe that this suffering is not in vain. It has become a powerful testimony to our identification with the people of Israel and, through them, with the sufferings of the Messiah Himself.

We should be able to rebuild the new center within the next year. Meanwhile, we are continuing our ministry across the street as we have kept our rental facility for another year. Now is the time to bring Jesus’s love and grace to hurting Israelis, and we want to be there for Him and for them!

Sharing in Israel’s—and Messiah’s—Suffering

The missile strike on our new facility deepened our connection with the State of Israel. Our suffering has drawn us closer to the Savior, “a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief,” and to our Jewish people. Paul knew the meaning of suffering as well. He caused believers suffering in his former life. The apostle wrote to the Roman believers, “And if [we are] children, [we are] heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him so that we may also be glorified with Him”(Romans 8:17).

In suffering, we stand in solidarity with Israel—not as outsiders, but as Jewish and Gentile believers who love the Jewish people and have chosen to walk a path of discipleship marked by obedience, rejection, and sacrifice. Our Messiah walked this same path.

A Historical Commitment to the Jewish People

Chosen People Ministries’ connection to Israel is not new. Our roots stretch back to before Israel’s rebirth in 1948, when our early missionaries there ministered to Jewish communities in the land under the British mandate. We helped Holocaust survivors resettle and rebuild their lives, including some who came to faith and became foundational leaders in Israel’s Messianic movement. More recently, our work has grown among Russian-speaking Jewish immigrants and native Israelis alike.

Our commitment to Israel has always had its roots in love—for the people, for the land, and above all, for the Messiah who walked its soil. The bombing of our center is not the first time we have suffered, and it will not be the last. But it serves as a physical symbol of the truth—that we are willing to share in Israel’s sufferings because our Lord did, and we follow Him. 

Witnessing through Suffering

Paul’s words in Colossians 1:24 are particularly poignant: “Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I do my share on behalf of His body, which is the church, in filling up what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions.”Suffering is not pointless; it is purposeful. It draws us closer to Jesus, conforms us to His likeness, and becomes a testament to our love for Israel and the Jewish people.

Knowing His sufferings and the sufferings of our people motivates our Israeli staff to serve displaced families—and especially their children—in the wake of war by serving in the very places where missiles fell. One of our Israeli staff praised the Lord for the opportunity to care for more than one hundred displaced children and their families immediately after the missile strike. It was nothing short of providential. We were in the right place at the right time, able to bring healing, comfort, and the love of the Messiah to those who were hurting. In the future, we will be rebuilding alongside the one-hundred-plus families who also suffered loss because of the destruction caused by the Iranian missile. 

A Witness for the Future

We believe that the damage to our center—dedicated just two days before the missile strike—will serve as an ongoing testimony. It testifies to our love for Israel. It testifies to our willingness to suffer with our people. Ultimately, it testifies to the Suffering Servant, Yeshua the Messiah, who gave Himself not only for Israel but also for the nations.

In 2 Corinthians 4:17, Paul reminds us, “For momentary, light affliction is producing for us an eternal weight of glory far beyond all comparison.” We cling to that hope, and we press on—not despite our sufferings, but through them.

As we await the day when Yeshua returns to rule and reign from Jerusalem, we will continue to minister in His name among His people and in His love and embrace the privilege of suffering for His glory!

I cannot thank you enough for your faithfulness and pray you will join us in our Rebuilding Israel Campaign.

In light of the rise in antisemitic outbreaks around the world, the ongoing battles in the land, and the public relations war involving Israel, this year will be crucial for Your Mission to the Jewish People and the nation of Israel . . . let’s stand together.

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Damage to our New Tel Aviv Center: My Reflection on Israel

On the morning of June 19, a powerful Iranian ballistic missile hit our new Tel Aviv Messianic Center. I think the best way to describe my sentiments about the bombing of our new center is by reflecting on my deep connection to Israel and the Jewish people.

My Personal Connection to Israel

I was raised in a traditional Jewish home and brought up to love the nation of Israel. Even though I was a New Yorker, every Jewish person I knew was a Zionist. Our heroes growing up were people like David Ben Gurion, Moshe Dayan, or Mickey Marcus (my grandfather’s favorite), the father of the Israeli Air Force.

As kids, we often talked about Israel, and I had always wanted to go there. Israel was just part of who we were, and I knew it was our true homeland. Israel grew out of the ashes of the greatest tragedy in Jewish history, and if we, as Jewish kids, took pride in anything, it was in Israel, with its Jewish army, its Jewish language (modern Hebrew), and so much more. Just knowing that Israel existed strengthened my Jewish identity and reminded me that if we were again persecuted, we could fight back because we had our own country.

Some critics of the Jewish people believe that what I have just described makes me guilty of dual loyalty, a typical antisemitic trope. This is unfounded. I am a proud Jewish person and a proud American; it has never been an either-or for me. I believe that God connected me to two nations I love and to whom I am loyal. When I became a believer in Jesus at nineteen years old, my feelings about Israel intensified because of my developing belief in God and the Bible. I felt more connected to the God of my fathers through the Jewish Messiah.

As I grew in the faith, my understanding of who I was as a Jewish person grew and matured as well. While Israel has always been part of my heart and soul, through Jesus, I became spiritually connected to Israel and more in love with the land than ever before. My Messiah grew up in Israel, and that is where His ministry and earthly life were centered. This only caused me to love the Lord and the land promised to my forefathers even more.

As the leader of a 131-year-old Mission to the Jewish people, I recognize that Israel now encompasses about half of the world’s Jewish population. I could not be more passionate about finding ways for the message of the Jewish Messiah to be proclaimed in the land of His birth. This commitment has caused me to be intensely involved with the work of Chosen People Ministries—Israel, which I consider to be the privilege of a lifetime. One of the greatest joys I have is caring for our Israeli staff, whom I believe are true heroes for the gospel.

History of Chosen People Ministries—Israel

Let me back up a little bit and tell you about the history of our Mission to the Jewish people in Israel. The Mission began before Israel became a modern state in 1948, with British missionaries under the British Mandate. Our workers served among the few hundred thousand Jewish people in the land, and they were intensively engaged in helping Jewish refugees from the Holocaust settle in Israel.  

The influx of Russian-speaking Jewish people to the land in the late 1980s and beyond transformed Chosen People Ministries, as many Russian-speaking Jewish people came to faith in Jesus and committed their lives to Him. Fifty percent of our work in Israel is now conducted by Russian-speaking Jewish people who immigrated to Israel, found the Lord, and gave their lives to serving Him in the land.

Several years ago, we decided to begin a work among the 4.7 million Israelis in the greater Tel Aviv area. We rented a space in an urban suburb called Ramat Gan, which is immediately adjacent to Tel Aviv, and began holding concerts, Sabbath dinners, Bible studies, moms’ groups, and so much more. The community and the work began to grow. A few years later, we decided that we needed a new center and began looking, but we could not find an appropriate fit for our needs. We then entered the time of the pandemic and paused our search.

Finally, by God’s grace, we found a new facility two-and-a-half times the size of the current one! This was a miracle because properties in the area were mostly larger apartment buildings and commercial retail properties. They were also very expensive—prices similar to Manhattan. But we knew we needed the space. Young Israelis were showing overwhelming interest in our programs. So, we trusted God and purchased this beautiful spot, which is near the light rail, a major form of transportation for young Israelis. We began to build out the space, as it was 4,000 square feet of unfinished cement on two floors when we purchased it.

Then, tragically, October 7 occurred, transforming the entire landscape of life and work in Israel.

I cannot tell you how much I still grieve for the remaining hostages and their families, as well as for all the lives lost. This was a devastating experience for Israel, yet, unfortunately, Israel is being regularly condemned for their response to the tragedy.

We completed the build-out project within two years, which is a major miracle.

In June, we took more than sixty people on our “Dedication Tour” of Israel, as our major goal of the trip was to dedicate the new facility. There was quite a bit of tension in the air because of the ongoing conflict with Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis. We all knew that the fountain of this hatred of Israel and distorted vision of life was coming from Iran. We were amazed that we had so many people coming with us to Israel and that none canceled. The tour was emotionally and spiritually moving, especially our visit to the Nova Music Festival memorial grounds and the city of Sderot, the scene of considerable violence on October 7. 

During our first few days in Israel, we began hearing rumblings of concern about the possibility that Iran could soon manufacture nuclear weapons. The Israeli leadership believed the threat of Iran attacking Israel was growing. So, after about four days of our tour, Israel attacked Iran and, as you would expect, Iran retaliated with ballistic missiles and drones.

In previous trips to Israel, I heard the sirens, fled to bomb shelters, and heard the booms

of missiles from Gaza and Yemen, but the Iranian missiles were far fiercer and caused considerable damage. The experience of running to bomb shelters several times caused our friends and supporters on the trip to grow closer to the Jewish people and Israel in particular.

Damage to Our New Tel Aviv Center

On the day we left to return to the United States, my wife and I had just arrived at the airport when we heard air raid sirens screaming as missiles flew overhead toward Israel. We had no idea at that time that these were the missiles that would hit our brand-new, recently finished, and dedicated center on the morning of June 19. Thankfully, no one died in that attack, which is an incredible miracle.

I believe most of the damage within the new center is cosmetic and can be fixed over a few months. However, our center is located on the first two floors of a large condominium building. Structural damage to the building itself is far more problematic, and we are waiting for the city engineers to inform us of the building’s status. We will keep our lease on our prior rented facility, which lost all its windows from the missile blast. I believe this facility can be repaired quickly, and we will be able to continue our ministry. I will try to keep you further informed about what it will take for us to get into and repair the new center once the structural integrity is determined.

We know that the Lord Jesus will soon return, conquer His enemies, and sit on His rightful throne. We look forward to that glorious day, but until then, He has called us to make disciples of all nations—and that includes Israel. The apostle Paul said that the gospel is for all, but “to the Jew first”(Romans 1:16), so we will continue our work until He comes.

We need your prayers, support, and love more than ever before!

Thank you for taking the time to understand my heart for my own people and for the Jewish state. I deeply appreciate your love for the Lord, the Jewish Messiah.

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Sheltering under His Wings

There is now a temporary peace between Israel and Iran, and we hope and pray it holds and that the actions of both the Israeli and United States military have neutralized the nuclear threat Iran posed to Israel and the free world.  

A New Understanding of Sheltering!

The word “sheltering” is the term our Israel staff families use to let us know they are safely in bomb shelters as missiles rain overhead from Iran, Hamas, the Houthis, and Hezbollah.

This beautiful and impactful Hebrew word for shelter, סֵתֶר (seter), is found throughout the Bible, but especially in the Psalms. For example, one of the most well-known uses appears Psalm 91:

He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say to the Lord, “My refuge and my fortress, My God, in whom I trust!” For it is He who delivers you from the snare of the trapper and from the deadly pestilence. He will cover you with His pinions, and under His wings you may seek refuge; His faithfulness is a shield and bulwark (Psalm 91:1–4).

Seter is often used to refer to the secret place where God hides His saints. The following are some other wonderful and comforting passages where seter is used to describe God protecting His people:

  1.  “You are my hiding (סֵתֶר) place; You preserve me from trouble; You surround me with songs of deliverance” (Psalm 32:7).
  2.  In the secret place (סֵתֶר) of His tent He will hide me” (Psalm 27:5).
  3. “You hide them in the secret place (סֵתֶר) of Your presence” (Psalm 31:20).

This word has taken on a new depth of meaning for me after spending a few weeks in Israel this summer. Over the past year and a half, my dear brothers and sisters in Israel have been bombarded by missiles from various sources: Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis, and more recently and intensively, from Iran. Iran sent hundreds of drones and ballistic, cruise, and hypersonic missiles loaded with explosives.

The first two waves came through Iranian proxies—Hamas and Hezbollah—who Iran has been supporting, arming, and encouraging! Let us not forget that on October 7, 2023, thousands of Hamas terrorists stormed into Israel, mercilessly killing innocent young Israelis at a music festival, on an army base, and then turned their ire onto various settlements in what is known as the “Gaza envelope.” By the end of that day, more than 1,200 people were murdered, 250 were kidnapped, and since the defensive war began, more than 1,000 Israeli soldiers have been killed as well.

When the war in 2023 started, almost 700 days ago, our staff—mostly younger Israelis and many with small children—would rush to bomb shelters throughout the night and sometimes during the day. Through their WhatsApp group, they would let everyone know they were safe in their shelters by using the English word sheltering as a code word for safety.

Our Tel Aviv Messianic Center’s Dedication Tour Interrupted

In mid-June, I led a tour of sixty devoted followers of Jesus and lovers of Israel on our dedication tour that marked the opening of our new Tel Aviv Messianic Center. Little did we know that on our way through the tour, Israel would attack Iran’s nuclear facilities and many military positions to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons. Soon Iran’s proxies would regularly fire missiles, which drove us to visit the bomb shelters. For days we heard the blasting sirens at least twice a night and sometimes during the day.

Israel’s leaders had sufficient reason to believe that Iran and its military leaders had manufactured enough nuclear material to put together at least a half a dozen nuclear projectiles that would undoubtedly magnify their efforts to destroy Israel. The leaders of the Jewish state chose to act quickly to neutralize this threat, as well as the Iranian military infrastructure. Israel was able to stage a preemptive strike and, though not perfect, the Israeli Air Force was able to significantly reduce Iran’s nuclear capabilities.

However, Iran still launched hundreds of various types of missiles into Israel. Most were shot down by Israel and the United States, but some made it through, killing people and damaging homes, schools, hospitals, and other buildings, including our rented center and our new center, which was dedicated two days before the attack.

Helping Those Displaced by War

Let me tell you what happened immediately after Iran’s intensive bombing on Israel and then give you some idea of how you can help. I received this email from a staff member—at that time still at the last hotel where our group stayed—the day I began leading our sixty-plus tour participants out of Israel through Amman, Jordan:

When the tour group left, we noticed the hotel lobby filling with families from a building that took a direct hit from an Iranian rocket. There were 110 hotel rooms of people who arrived with over 100 children. I immediately went to the manager and asked if we can do something to help the children. They gave us a room that was used for displaced children earlier in the war. It was dirty and disorganized, so we cleaned it up and began offering the parents a place with games and crafts as well as helpers for their kids.

We have now coordinated with the hotel and have a team of social workers, along with a volunteer community group, who works with kids, but it’s not nearly enough. As some of us engaged the kids, others spoke and prayed with moms and offered an ear and comfort to people who were displaced and frazzled. We are also supplying some personal hygiene items and diapers. Since we were still at the hotel after the tour, we decided to prolong our stay for a week to try and serve these newly displaced Israeli families in practical ways and show them the love of God through Jesus the Messiah.

Please pray as the people don’t know how long they will stay here or where they will go. The children are very stressed by the sirens and the level of threat to their families and homes. 

Thank you for your prayers and for the support Chosen People Ministries is providing so that we can serve needy and hurting Israelis and their children.

Helping the Helpers!

Let me share a few ideas about how you can partner with us during Israel’s time of need. Our ministries in Israel must continue and increase more than ever before, as the need is overwhelming.

  1. Chosen People Ministries needs to meet the physical and material needs of Israelis in the name of Jesus, as the Messiah also fed and cared for those He was seeking to save.
  2. Israel needs the prayers and support of the global church:
    • Please pray for Israel’s defense, and for nations of the world and the media to be more supportive of Israel.
    • Pray for the victims of the Iranian regime whose ideology is shared by the Houthis, Hamas, and Hezbollah. Please also pray that, along with Israelis, the innocent in those countries ruled by these terrorist groups discover the love of God and His ability to shelter us from evil.

It is wonderful to see how many Israelis and Jewish people outside Israel recognize that truly devoted Christians have a deep and abiding love for the Jewish people and the State of Israel.

We know Israel is not perfect, nor is any country or human being. Because of that universal reality, we need to live our lives in the shelter of His presence and help others discover the real peace that comes from the presence of the Lord. More than anything else, the Jewish people need to know the Lord, and our global staff is bringing the gospel message to Israelis and Jewish people, young and old, around the globe.

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Hineni! Isaiah’s Call and Ours

We live in turbulent times, which is why it is so important that we put our trust in the Lord and make ourselves available for service. We have an inspiring example of this in the ancient Hebrew prophet Isaiah. There is no place where the character and commitment of the prophet are more clearly seen than when God Himself called him to ministry (Isaiah 6).

Isaiah’s call came around 740 BCE, when the kingdom of Judah stood at a crossroads. King Uzziah, who had reigned for fifty-two years, was dead. With his passing came uncertainty, fear, and the looming shadow of Assyrian aggression on the horizon.

For Isaiah, this was not just a national crisis—it was personal. He had lived and prophesied during Uzziah’s reign, warning of God’s judgment upon a people whose hearts had grown cold. Now, as political stability crumbled, so, too, did any illusion that his words had made a difference. The vineyard of Israel, as he would later describe it, was about to be trampled and laid waste (Isaiah 5:5–6).

In this moment of profound despair and seeming failure, God revealed Himself to Isaiah in a way that would forever transform the prophet’s life.

A Vision of Glory

Isaiah described his extraordinary divine encounter as follows: “In the year of King Uzziah’s death I saw the Lord sitting on a throne, lofty and exalted, with the train of His robe filling the temple” (Isaiah 6:1).

Amid earthly loss and uncertainty, Isaiah was granted a glimpse of the true King who would never die, seated on His eternal throne, lifted above all others in the heavens. 

The terms used to describe God’s posture are “high and lifted up,” which also match the prophet’s description of the Messiah in Isaiah 52:13, “Behold, My servant will prosper, He will be high and lifted up and greatly exalted.” These words offer a further hint of the divine nature of the coming Servant of the Lord.

The imagery is striking as the train of God’s robe filled the entire Temple. This vision provides our first glimpse into the heart of Isaiah’s message—amid human frailty and failing kingdoms, God’s sovereign rule remains unshaken and all-encompassing.

Above this throne were the seraphim, fiery angelic beings whose very name recalls the “fiery serpents” of Israel’s wilderness wanderings (Numbers 21:4–9). Their thunderous chorus echoed through the Temple, “Holy, Holy, Holy, is the Lord of hosts, the whole earth is full of His glory” (Isaiah 6:3).

The Hebrew word for “holy” (kadosh) means set apart. Three times, the seraphim declared God’s utter otherness—His complete separation from sin and creation. This repetition is not mere poetry but a profound expression of God’s triune nature, although Isaiah himself may not have fully comprehended this mystery. As the seraphim proclaimed God’s holiness, the very foundations of the Temple thresholds trembled, and smoke filled the sanctuary. 

The Cleansing of a Prophet

In the presence of this overwhelming holiness, Isaiah could only see one thing clearly—his own unworthiness, “Woe is me, for I am ruined! Because I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts” (Isaiah 6:5). The Hebrew word for “ruined” (damah) means utterly destroyed. Isaiah recognized that his prophetic lips were unclean (tamey), the same term used throughout Leviticus to describe ritual impurity. 

Isaiah may have wondered how a man with unclean lips and an unclean heart could speak God’s holy word. How could he condemn Israel’s sin when he himself was so deeply flawed? Yet, God’s response to Isaiah’s confession reveals the core of the gospel message:

Then one of the seraphim flew to me with a burning coal in his hand, which he had taken from the altar with tongs. He touched my mouth with it and said, “Behold, this has touched your lips; and your iniquity is taken away and your sin is forgiven” (Isaiah 6:6–7).

The coal was not just any coal, but one taken from the altar of sacrifice—drenched in the blood of atonement. The seraph’s touch did not just cleanse Isaiah’s lips for prophetic speech. It provided comprehensive forgiveness. His iniquity was taken away, and his sin atoned for by the shed blood of the sacrifice (Leviticus 17:11).

Again, we see a foreshadowing of the Messiah. Just as Isaiah received cleansing through sacrificial blood, we receive forgiveness through the ultimate sacrifice of Yeshua (Jesus). Additionally, like Isaiah, our cleansing is not just a one-time event from years ago but a daily reality that enables us to be intimate with God and prepares us for service. 

Saying Yes to God

Encountering God’s holiness and experiencing His cleansing grace positioned Isaiah to hear God’s call: “Then I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, ‘Whom shall I send, and who will go for Us?’ Then I said, ‘Here am I. Send me!’” (Isaiah 6:8).

The Hebrew phrase, “Here am I” (hineni) is far more than a statement of physical presence. It is a declaration of complete availability and readiness to follow orders. Throughout Scripture, this response marks moments of profound encounter with God: Abraham said, “Hineni!” when God called him to sacrifice Isaac (Genesis 22:1); Moses said it when God spoke from the burning bush (Exodus 3:4); and Samuel said it when God called him as a boy in the Temple (1 Samuel 3:4).

Each of these instances represented a turning point—a moment when ordinary people made themselves fully available to an extraordinary God. 

The Challenge of Faith

What makes Isaiah’s story so remarkable is what happened after he said, “Hineni.” Isaiah received perhaps the most discouraging commission in Scripture:

Go, and tell this people: “Keep on listening, but do not perceive; keep on looking, but do not understand.” Render the hearts of this people insensitive, their ears dull, and their eyes dim, otherwise they might see with their eyes, hear with their ears, understand with their hearts, and return and be healed. (Isaiah 6:9–10)

God was essentially telling Isaiah he would preach, but the people would not listen, and his preaching would make their hearts harder. No wonder Isaiah responded with the anguished question: “Lord, how long?” The answer was equally devastating: “Until cities are devastated and without inhabitant, houses are without people and the land is utterly desolate” (Isaiah 6:11).

The Hebrew prophet teaches us some great lessons in evangelistic patience, which is what many of us who serve with Chosen People Ministries have learned. We know that the day is coming when the Lord will turn the hearts of the Jewish nation to Jesus (Romans 11:25–29), even though we are eager and pray for our Jewish people to come to know their Messiah right now. 

The Promise of the Remnant

Even amid this dire commissioning, God offered Isaiah a glimmer of hope about a faithful remnant, “Yet there will be a tenth portion in it, and it will again be subject to burning, like a terebinth or an oak whose stump remains when it is felled. The holy seed is its stump” (Isaiah 6:13).

This doctrine of a remnant runs throughout Scripture. The prophet predicts that even though Israel might be cut down like a tree, the stump—a faithful remnant—would remain, preserving the possibility of new growth. The apostle Paul would also later write: “In the same way then, there has also come to be at the present time a remnant according to God’s gracious choice” (Romans 11:5).

This remnant doctrine allows us to redefine success in evangelism. We are called to faithfulness, not visible results. We proclaim the gospel to all, knowing some will reject it while others—the remnant God has prepared—will receive it. The Lord has called us to faithfully proclaim the good news and let Him bring the good result!

Our Hineni Moment

What does Isaiah’s experience mean for us today? Like him, we live in uncertain times. Like him, we may feel our witness falls on deaf ears. Like him, we are painfully aware of our own unworthiness.

Yet Isaiah’s vision offers us hope. The same commission—difficult though it may be—comes with the same promise of a remnant who will believe.

Therefore, knowing His forgiveness and in obedience to His call:

  • We preach whether people respond positively or not.
  • We preach until the opportunity is no longer available.
  • We preach, confident in God’s promise to preserve a faithful remnant for Yeshua.

We do not measure our success by visible results but by our faithfulness to the gospel. Our motivation comes not from confidence in our own abilities but from a vision of God’s glory and grace through Jesus.

Are we ready to say hineni—to be available to God and to serve Him in bringing the message of Yeshua to the Jew first and also to the Gentiles (Romans 1:16)? May we, like Isaiah, be transformed by a vision of God’s holiness, cleansed by His grace and compelled by His call to say with sincere hearts, “Hineni, send me.”

Thank you for your love, faithful support, and prayers for our global staff who call on the Lord for His holy purposes while reaching Jewish people for the Messiah.

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Israel and Jewish Evangelism Today

Happy New Year! I hope and pray 2025 will be a fruitful year as you and I serve the Lord. 

There is a wonderful story about the relationship between John Wilkinson, a Gentile missionary who founded the Mildmay Mission to the Jews, and J. Hudson Taylor, founder of the China Inland Mission (now OMF International). Every January, Taylor would send Wilkinson a gift with a note attached, “To the Jew first.” Wilkinson would then send the same amount back as a gift to Taylor for his work among the Chinese with a note that read, “And also to the Gentiles.” This true story nicely captures what we will learn in this letter: how we can prioritize reaching Jewish people and still reach the world as commanded by our Messiah prior to His ascension.

There is no doubt that Jewish people need to consciously accept Jesus to obtain salvation and have access to God the Father (John 14:6; Acts 4:12). This saving faith grows out of a Spirit-enlightened understanding of the gospel brought about by embracing Yeshua (Jesus) as the Messiah (John 3:16–17, 16:8).

It is also clear God made promises to the nation of Israel. While these promises do not guarantee the salvation of every Jewish person, they do assure us that the people of Israel will play an important role in the final chapter of the drama of redemption outlined in the Scriptures.

Believing what the Bible tells us about Israel’s guaranteed role in the future should not dampen our enthusiasm to proclaim the gospel among Jewish people today. Our hearts should be inspired to fervently proclaim the gospel to Jewish people, knowing the time is near and that the salvation of the Jewish remnant is linked to the second coming of the Messiah Jesus.

An End-Times Motivation for Jewish Evangelism

Until recent days, a key factor in motivating many Christians to reach Jewish people with the gospel was the belief that the salvation of the Jewish remnant was connected to the coming of the Lord. The wide acceptance of this end-times inspiration for Jewish missions was also broadly understood among churches throughout the world.

Today, Jewish people and Jewish evangelism have somewhat fallen out of favor among Christians as Israel and Jewish people are not as noticeably needy of redemption. Many Western Christians have sided politically with Palestinians, viewing Israel and Jewish people more negatively, and have directed their “mission impulse” toward social justice issues and evangelizing Arabs, particularly Muslims. I applaud proclaiming the gospel among all people groups. However, many Christians passionate about evangelizing Muslims have embraced a one-sided view of Israel that conflicts with the facts of what is happening in the Middle East and with the Bible itself.

This shift in sympathies is now commonplace in the United Kingdom, northern and central Europe, and it is rising in North America, too. Those who do not take the biblical prophecies about the land of Israel in a literal sense are fueling these shifting sympathies, leading to a declining interest in Jewish evangelism.

This is why understanding the end-times rationale for Jewish missions and the role of Jewish people in the plan of God is critical. It is my hope that Gentile Christians will be moved by the Scriptures to bring the good news to God’s chosen people.

“To the Jew First” (Romans 1:16)

There are several critical passages which should undergird an end-times motivation for Jewish missions. One of the most important is Romans 1:16: “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.”

Those engaged in Jewish evangelism are familiar with this passage and understand its importance in motivating the church toward Jewish evangelism. This brief verse has been interpreted in a number of different ways, but more often than not, it is used to emphasize the importance of Gentile Christians reaching Jewish people with the gospel.

I would suggest that one of the reasons the apostle Paul believed the gospel should go to Jewish people first was because of his understanding of the events of the last days. When Romans 1:16 is viewed in this way, the urgency of Jewish evangelism becomes evident. One cannot fully understand Romans 1:16 without understanding Paul’s conclusion in Romans 11, where he speaks about the end-times repentance of the remnant of Israel and their reception of Jesus as Savior. If we look closely, the priority described in Romans 1:16 is founded on Romans 11:25–27 (and more fully on 11:11–29) and must be viewed in light of the role Jewish people play in the second coming of Christ.

Paul is not suggesting that the Roman believers withhold the gospel from the Gentiles until every Jewish person in the world is reached. Neither is the apostle implying that the gospel has already come to Jewish people first and that this priority no longer applies to the mission of the church today. Romans 1:16 was written in the present tense. Therefore, if the gospel is still “the power of God for salvation” and is still for “everyone who believes,” then the gospel is still “to the Jew first.”

Paul, the apostle to the Gentiles, focused his ministry on reaching non-Jewish people with the gospel message. Yet, this did not lessen his concern for the salvation of Jewish people. Wherever Paul went in his ministry among the Gentiles, he also preached the gospel to Jewish people living in that area (Acts 13:13–52, 14:1–5, 18:7–11, 19:8–10). He would make sure this was his first evangelistic effort in a particular city before he spoke to the Gentiles. The salvation of Jewish people was an ever-present concern for Paul, and his actions described in the book of Acts reveal his understanding of what he penned in Romans 1:16.

The apostle’s argument may be summarized (and connected with Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:39) as follows: When Jewish people are successfully evangelized, then Jesus the Messiah will return. There was an end-times urgency in the tone of Paul’s preaching and in his letter to the Roman believers, encouraging them to prioritize outreach to Jewish people. His theology was enacted in his own strategy for mission. And this is why we should follow suit. In effect, Paul argued that if the church desired to witness the second coming of Christ, Jewish people must be evangelized.

The church cannot neglect Jewish evangelism: Jewish evangelism should not become the great omission of the Great Commission, and the church must make Jewish evangelism a priority because of Romans 1:16. 

“All Israel Will Be Saved” (Romans 11) 

Paul connected the priority of reaching Jewish people with the end times, and he argued that God has not cast off His people Israel despite their national rejection of Jesus the Messiah (Romans 11). His concluding statement proving God is not finished with Israel is that “all Israel will be saved” (Rom 11:25–27). Furthermore, he wrote:

Now if their transgression is riches for the world and their failure is riches for the Gentiles, how much more will their fulfillment be! For if their rejection is the reconciliation of the world, what will their acceptance be but life from the dead? (Rom 11:12, 15).

God has not rejected Jewish people (Rom 11:1) but rather has preserved a remnant within the nation (Rom 11:5) until the remnant becomes the nation. In this passage, the apostle tells us that in the end, God will save “all Israel,” which I believe refers to the entirety of the nation of Israel alive at that time.

This monumental end-times event takes place after the fullness of the Gentiles has come in. It is evident from this passage that prior to the salvation of national Israel and the end of days there is a time when God will be at work among the Gentiles in a special way—grafting numerous “wild branches” into the olive tree as described in Romans 11:16–24.

In summary, Jewish people will return to the God of our fathers by accepting the Messiah. The nations will then witness the return of the Lord Jesus. God has not rejected His people because He is always faithful to His promises (Rom 11:29).

Reaching Jewish people with the gospel must become a priority for all Christians as, ultimately, the salvation of Jewish people ushers in Jesus’ second coming and releases the fullness of God’s blessings to the whole world. 

Outreach to Jewish people begins with you! Through your prayers, giving, and witnessing to your Jewish friends, the plan of God will go forth in power! We cannot allow Jewish evangelism to become the great omission of the Great Commission.

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Global Conference on Russian Jewish Church Planting

MitchGlaser_Portrait copyShalom!

I have exciting news:

Our fourth global conference on Russian Jewish church planting will take place on September 14-17, 2016.

Let me explain why this conference in Warsaw is perfect for honoring the past and affirming the bright future we have because of Jesus!

  • Before the Holocaust, Poland was home to the largest Jewish community in Europe.
  • Poland today still values its rich Jewish history.
  • Chosen People Ministries was at work in Warsaw before the Holocaust and touched the lives of many Jewish people for the Lord.

We expect more than 100 Russian Jewish believers to attend. These dedicated people who are leading or planting congregations in the former Soviet Union, the United States, Canada and of course, in Israel!

Over the last 25 years, thousands of Russian Jewish people have come to know Jesus as their Messiah and Lord!

Because of 70 years of atheistic communism in the USSR, Russian Jewish people often have a strong cultural and ethnic identity as Jews, but know little about God, the scriptures, or the Messiah.

Today we find that Russian Jews are hungry to know more about the Lord.

Since the fall of the USSR, 1.5 million+ Russian Jews returned to Israel — and most believers in Israel would say that 60% of the Messianic Jews within Israel speak Russian as their mother tongue!

Your Mission to the Jewish People is a vital part of this movement: evangelizing, discipling, planting congregations and raising up leaders among the Israeli-Russian Jewish believers.

In fact, the director of our Israel work is a Ukrainian Jewish believer who found Jesus in Israel!

Israel has provided wonderful opportunities and a new start for Jewish people who have come to the Holy Land from areas of the world where they were persecuted. And many Russian-speaking Jewish people bless Israel with their advanced degrees, expertise in the arts, technology, medicine and many other skills.

Other Russian Jewish people are elderly and in desperate financial straits, relying on welfare as many are too old to work and unable to learn Hebrew with adequate proficiency to continue their professions.

With your help, we’re providing food, clothing, enrichment programs and so much more. Many of those we reach are Holocaust survivors. Our being there for them opens their hearts to Yeshua.

War-Torn Ukraine
We are also working intensively in various areas of Ukraine and in Moscow where we have begun two Chosen People Ministries’ Messianic congregations. Just this summer:

  • We sponsored 14 services at Purim and Passover, attended by about 500-600 people.
  • At the same time, we visited 179 Jewish families to distribute food.
  • We launched three new “Fellowship groups” in 3 different cities: Kherson, Belaya Tzerkov, and Sevastopol.
  • We funded humanitarian aid for disabled people, widows, elderly and needy Jewish people.
  • 16 Jewish people became believers and began to attend to local Messianic congregations.
  • And one new congregation in Chernigov was started.

The Future Is Bright for Russian Jewish Evangelism
As you can see, the Lord is doing a great work today among Jewish people! And your support makes all this, and more, possible.

The Russian Jewish Leadership Conference in Warsaw will greatly enhance our vision and work.

Yours in Messiah,

Dr. Mitch Glaser
President

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Filed under Church Planting, Conference, Israel, Messianic Jewish, Russian Israelis