Happy Housecleaning: Part II

WHO IS ISRAEL? A PARABLE

by Diane Bahler <DBahler5@aol.com>
December 9, 2001

I sent out an email a couple of days ago about the history of Hanukkah as background for the "housecleaning" or "temple cleansing" that needs to be done with our current mindsets this season. However, first some more background needs to be laid that is foundational to understanding the prophetic significance of how the story of Hanukkah is the story of Israel today. One of the most distorted mindsets that we have is our belief about who Israel is what is the church. New understanding is essential if we're to properly interpret the signs of our times and be prepared for the events of the end of the age.

Let's begin with the question of "Who is Israel?". There are two books by Angus and Batya Wooten that I am going to give the references to at the bottom of this email. I highly recommend everyone order and read them. These books do a very thorough job of documenting the truth about Israel and the restoring of her Kingdom.  I can not begin to make the case that these books do for Israel in an email.  I can only give you a brief synopsis of what I believe is the truth and a different perspective than that which is held by most of those in the current Christian church system.

When most people think of Israel they think of a tiny piece of geography in the Middle East populated by "Jews."  This is only the most concrete observable level.  In fact, Israel is much more than that both in terms of geography and population. Remember that the Lord looks at things from multiple perspectives and His concept of Israel is much more complex.

Let me tell you a "fairytale" or a "parable" that is more fact than fiction although I am going to take a little poetic license.

There once were two young sisters named Judah and Ephraim. Together they constituted the house of Israel. Both sisters were betrothed to a great king. While waiting for their beloved to come and take them to the formal wedding they got lost in the desert.  Life in the desert was hard and the two couldn't get along. They fought among themselves and separated into two
houses.  Weakened by division both eventually were carried off by evil kings. They were raped and forced into servitude.

Ephraim was abducted by the king of Assyria and was passed around among the nations. She must have lost her mind because not only did she forget about her bridegroom but she forgot who she was also. Even though she carried the birthright of the firstborn in the house of Israel and was destined to be a great queen she became a beggar. She sold herself to false religions to preserve herself and she slipped deeper and deeper into a walking coma. She was sort of a Sleeping Beauty zombie. In the meantime, however, she had many, many children and they had children and pretty soon the nations were so intermingled with her bloodline that it became difficult to tell which were "gentile" and which were Israel.

The king of Babylon carried off Judah and although she did not forget who she was and her heritage, she did forget about her bridegroom. She committed adultery with Babylon - power, politics and religion - for protection and provision. When her bridegroom came to rescue her she didn't recognize him and even helped beat him and send him away.

Rejected, the bridegroom left but sent his servants to the gentile nations to search for his beloved Ephraim. Ephraim was still in a deep sleep but began to wake up as she heard the messengers calling for her and as she began to eat from the tree of life and drink the living waters. Her sister Judah was also beginning to wake up as she began to realize she had missed her bridegroom.  In addition, to share in the joy of the news of their salvation, others - true gentiles without blood lineage- were also being invited to join the house of Israel as full sons and daughters. Freedom was being declared for ALL prisoners. The House of Israel was on its way to being reunited, enlarged and restored to her destiny.

Enter the evil queen of Babylon - the black widow. The evil queen was jealous of Israel. She had been rejected by Israel's King and bridegroom and hated him. She had tried to kill him but failed. She knew the best way to hurt him now was to hurt his beloved Israel. Babylon, like a big black widow spider, moved into the house of Israel and began injecting her with poison. Both sisters fell back asleep like Snow White, as they were fed the poisoned apple from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.

The queen drove Ephraim and Judah apart again. She turned Ephraim against Judah spinning lies about how Judah was responsible for sending away her beloved. Buying into the lie Ephraim began to persecute Judah and separated herself from her family and heritage. Believing that her  "step-mother" was caring for her and protecting her, Ephraim began to turn over her possessions, her home and her identity to Babylon.

Babylon moved in and made herself queen of the manor. Soon she was hatching her own eggs and raising up poisonous stepdaughters and stepsons who helped their mother plunder Ephraim's inheritance. Still hoping to possess the true King's kingdom Babylon dressed her daughters up with the hope of deceiving him into accepting her own counterfeit as his bride. She also enslaved Ephraim's adopted sisters from the gentile nations so that they would not steal her hope of fooling the King. Soon Ephraim (including her adopted gentile siblings) had become a sad Cinderella, the servant of the evil stepmother and her stepsisters, a slave in her own house. She had never fully recovered the memory of who she was and where she had come from and now it was completely lost. However, she could vaguely remember stories of the bridegroom and she continued to hold onto the hope that some day her prince would come for her.

Judah, in the meantime, became bitter and prideful and something of an old maid. She forgot her own sin and became angry at the bridegroom that she now refused to recognize. She closed herself off to protect herself from the outside persecution and she placed herself into a self-imposed prison of defensive unbelief. She became a "liberated woman" of sorts. She didn't need a Messiah to rescue her. She could and would take care of herself. She would rather die than trust her heart again.

Well, this would be a sad story with no happy ending if it weren't for the love of the bridegroom. The story is not yet complete but the ending goes something like this: The bridegroom will once again send his servants to both Ephraim (including her adopted gentile sisters) and to Judah to wake them up and prepare them for the return of the bridegroom. This time they will wake up and realize that they have been lied to and plundered. Ephraim will see that she has been replaced by a counterfeit and will leave the house that Babylon built. She will rise up, recognize her birthright and heritage and take back her inheritance. All that was stolen will be returned when she takes her case before the righteous judge that knows the story from beginning to end and who is just waiting for Israel to plead her case before him. She will go to her sister Judah and ask for forgiveness and their relationship will be restored.  Judah will recognize her need for her sister and Ephraim will regain the memories of her heritage from Judah. Judah will also realize that she too longs for and needs a knight in shinning armor to save her.

Reunited, stronger than ever before after having been tried through the fires, the two houses will unite with the engrafted adopted brothers and sisters. The children of both houses combined will be so numerous that they will cover the earth. Set free at last from the whirlwinds, their new house, like Dorothy's house from Oz, will fall on the house of the evil queen. There won't be anything left of her and her counterfeit children. She will not only be merely dead, she will be really most sincerely dead. In fact, the smoke of her burning will go up forever and ever.

The real happily ever after part of the story is that the bridegroom will come once again for his beloved Israel and will establish her as the queen of His Kingdom that she was destined to be. There will be a great wedding and a great feast. All the evil queen's horses and all the queen's men will become the main course. It will be a Bar-B-Q that will make Texas jealous.
Bar-B-Qued roast beast.

Of course, this is not the end of this story, only the beginning, but it's as far as we can go for right now. In the next email we'll look at the interpretation of this parable.

Highly recommended reading:  Who is Israel? By Batya Wootten and Restoring Israel's Kingdom by Angus Wooten. Published by Key of David Publishing, Saint Cloud, FL; Distributed by House of David, PO Box 700217, Saint Cloud, FL  34770  http://www.mim.net

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