Delight in Zion
It is often said that the greatest gifts come in small packages.
In March 2020, after I finished speaking at the Sunday service in De Rivier Church in Gouda, Holland, an older woman came up to me and placed a small package in my hand, carefully wrapped in tissue paper. The woman was very emotional, and it was clear that she was giving me something precious.
As I removed the tissue, I saw that I was holding a yad.
The yad (or pointer) is used in synagogue services when the Torah scrolls are read. Readers use it to follow the text on the scroll and avoid putting their fingers on the parchment.
The yad signifies the holiness of the Torah. It preserves the scrolls by preventing the damage that could be caused by human hands.
This reverence for the Torah resonates deeply with all of us who hold the Bible as God’s Word and understand its holiness and the powerful truths contained within its pages.
I have many childhood memories of attending my synagogue in East London and seeing the yad that was used there, including at my own bar mitzvah.
The woman who gave me the yad in Gouda was called Mieke Moens. She went on to tell me the amazing story behind it.
On 10th May 1940, the Nazis occupied Holland after a brief resistance from the Dutch army. When it became clear that the Nazis were coming to occupy all of Holland, the Jewish community in the city of Leiden feared for their lives.
At the time, there was a Bible-believing Christian man called Daniel Elkerbout who worked as a plasterer in Leiden and had assisted the Jewish community in some repair work on their synagogue.
Leaders from the Jewish community in Leiden approached Daniel and asked him if he would hide their Torah scrolls for them so that the Nazis would not destroy them.
Daniel agreed to keep their Torah scrolls safe and hid them behind a false wall that he created in his home. Even Daniel’s own family were unaware of these hidden Torah scrolls until after the war had ended!
When the war was over, the surviving members of the Jewish community in Leiden came back to Daniel and he happily returned their Torah scrolls to them.
With grateful hearts, these Jewish survivors presented Daniel with the yad from their synagogue as a token of their deep appreciation for this Christian who was willing to risk his life for the Jewish people.
What a powerful symbol of Christian love and sacrifice towards the Jewish people from whom the Saviour of the world and the Jewish Messiah came.
It later emerged the Elkerbout family also hid three Jewish people from the Nazi occupiers during the war, so saving their lives. But they never sought publicity for their heroic and courageous acts as they reasoned that they were only doing what any Bible-believing Christian should do in such circumstances.
The yad that Daniel received was a small, ornate, wooden pointer with ivory decoration. It remained in the Elkerbout family for three generations.
Meike Moens is the granddaughter of Daniel Elkerbout.
Meike explained to me the amazing history of this small precious yad and said that she felt it should not remain with the family anymore and should be returned to Israel!
I accepted the yad, but I knew that I would not keep it in my family home on Mount Carmel.
I felt honoured to carry it to Israel, and I knew that it should have a place where it would be seen by many people and its story would be preserved. So, I decided to donate it to Yad Vashem, Israel’s national Holocaust Memorial Museum in Jerusalem.
Due to the outbreak of COVID 19 and lengthy lockdowns when the museum was closed, the donation was put on hold.
Finally, after a two-and-a-half-year delay, I had the great privilege and joy of presenting the precious yad to Yad Vashem’s Archives and Fragments Departments on Sunday 23rd October 2022.
The yad will be used in exhibitions within Yad Vashem and will be seen by the tens of thousands of visitors that come to the memorial museum every year.
Jewish school groups making organised visits to Yad Vashem will also see the yad and hear the amazing story behind it.
In all my communications with my fellow Jewish people working in Yad Vashem, I was open about being a Messianic leader in Israel. In other words, they knew from the outset that I believe that Yeshua/Jesus is our Jewish Messiah and Saviour of the world.
I was aware that God was enabling me to be an ambassador for the growing body of Jewish believers in Yeshua in Israel and indeed, around the world.
As a Jewish believer, I was also a link in the chain that allowed this precious yad to pass from the synagogue in Leiden to a righteous Christian man in Holland before being returned to the Jewish people by a wonderful Christian woman, via me, a Jewish man who came to saving faith in Yeshua over 40 years ago in London.
I have had the great joy and privilege of being the bridge between the Church and my Jewish people whom I both love and honour.
There is an unbreakable chain that binds together the future of the Jewish people and the future of believers in Yeshua around the world.
Those of us who love and worship the Lord are longing for His return. The scriptures in both the Old and New Testament are very clear that He will return to Jerusalem (Acts 1:11, Zechariah 14:4).
Meanwhile, the Apostle Paul declares God’s holy perspective on the role of Gentile believers in the restoration of the Jewish people back to God through faith in Yeshua, and the resurrection life that the body of believers will receive when Jewish people come to faith in the Lord.
“For I speak to you Gentiles; inasmuch as I am an apostle to the Gentiles, I magnify my ministry, if by any means I may provoke to jealousy those who are my flesh and save some of them. For if their being cast away is the reconciling of the world, what will their acceptance be but life from the dead?” - Romans 11: 13-15
This merging of God’s ultimate salvation of Israel, and the future of all believers in our Lord is going to be hastened when Christian people show unconditional love and care for the Jewish people.
It is a process that calls all of us to step forward and be willing to play a part in this amazing restoration of Israel as a nation, and restoration of Israel to their Messiah.
Daniel Elkerbout must have understood this calling. His family have carried his memory of standing with the Jewish people in their dire need. Meike Moens understands this calling, too, and has returned the yad to Israel.
Next month, I will be returning to Gouda. I hope to see Meike Moens again and present her with a certificate and photos of the donation ceremony at Yad Vashem.
The precious pointer that was so graciously given to her grandfather, Daniel Elkerbout, will now remain forever in Jerusalem.
This serves as an illustration of what our future holds.
A small pointer to a vital restoration.
Shalom everyone.