Sunday, May 22, 2011

Messianic Judaism is Accepted In Israel


The Supreme Court of Israel ruled in 1989 that Messianic Judaism constituted another religion (it is considered by most Christians and Jews to be a form of Christianity), and that people who had become Messianic Jews were not therefore eligible for Aliyah under the law.

On April 16, 2008, the Supreme Court of Israel ruled in a case brought by a number of people with Jewish fathers and grandfathers whose applications for citizenship had been rejected on the grounds that they were Messianic Jews. The argument was made by the applicants that they had never been Jews according to halakha, and were not therefore excluded by the conversion clause. This argument was upheld in the ruling, and the government agreed to reprocess their applications.

Since 1950 2,734,245 Jews have immigrated to Israel. Hundreds of thousands of non-Jews have received Israeli citizenship due to the law.

The Rise of the Christian Faith in Israel now begins. This could also be the turning point of the Age of The Gentile, when God takes away his blessings from Gentiles and transfers those blessings to the restored nation of Israel as predicted in the books of Luke and Romans.

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