‘Therefore strengthen the hands which hang down, and the feeble knees, and make straight paths for your feet, so that what is lame may not be dislocated, but rather be healed. Pursue peace with all people, and holiness, without which no one will see the Lord’ - Hebrews 12:12-14
Recently, I was honoured to speak in Stuttgart Germany at an ICEJ (International Christian Embassy Jerusalem) event.
It was a special time of both celebration and painful remembrance as we celebrated 70 years of the restored German Republic, 30 years since the Berlin Wall came down, and all this as the nation of Israel entered into its annual Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day).
The event in Stuttgart included wonderful times of worship, and speakers from Germany, the US and Israel.
There was a beautiful rendition of the theme music from the film ‘Schindler’s List’ that moves me every time I hear it.
I believe the event was an example of the miracle of God’s powerful restoration that enabled Jews and Germans to stand together just 74 years after the end of World War II and the liberation of the appalling concentration camps, in which millions of Jewish people were slaughtered.
Our God works through processes of time. We know that our own personal healing experiences are often completed over extended periods of time.
The abused and broken relationship between the German and Jewish people is still in that process of restoration.
I remember my first ministry trip to Germany back in the 1980s. I was attending a ministers’ conference near the Black Forest.
My parents had previously told my brothers and I that they would never visit Germany as they could not imagine walking down the same street as someone who may have been a Nazi in the war. Such were and often still are the wounds carried by Jewish people because of the Holocaust. My parents were not alone in this regard. Albert Einstein refused to return to his birthplace, Ulm in Germany, for the same reasons, even though they wished to honour him and name a street in the city after him. This street - Einstein Strasse - is still there in Ulm today.
Before making my first visit to Germany in the 1980s, I decided to honour my parents by telling them I would not go if they didn’t want me to.
They responded by saying ‘Oh no son, we would never impose our feelings on any of our children.’ And so I made my first visit to Germany.
During that visit, I shared my testimony in a small church in the Black Forest. At the end of the service, the pastor approached me and asked if I could pray with a woman. He told me she was a Nazi during the war. She had repented and received God’s forgiveness, but she really wanted the forgiveness of a Jew!
As the woman wept before me and I knew I must pray for her, I struggled inwardly with myself. However, the moment I began to pray, I felt God’s presence ministering to me and giving me the grace to truly forgive.
From that day on, I found that I could freely and totally love the German people - a love that I know is supernatural.
Looking back, I am sure that God was laying foundations for all the ministry I am now privileged to undertake in Germany, and it is so much easier today, because I feel overwhelmingly loved by the German people.
We see German Christians volunteering in wonderful ways here in Israel, looking after Holocaust survivors, standing with the Jewish people, and serving in our own ministry. I, too, have been ‘adopted’ by a wonderful German family, whose love and kindness towards me often leaves me speechless.
When the Berlin wall came down 30 years ago, it was the German and the Jewish people who had most cause to celebrate. The Germans saw their nation reunified, and understandably and correctly declared Berlin as their undivided capital city. Meanwhile, over a million Jewish people were finally able to leave the former Soviet Union and return to their biblical home, Israel.
And what is good for the Germans to do in proclaiming Berlin as their undivided capital city, is also good for Israel, as Jerusalem is the everlasting undivided capital city of Israel.
Yes there are real battles ahead for this restoration process between Germany and Israel: Anti-Semitism is spreading like a cancer across Europe, the UK and the US, and just last week, a
report
about young Jews in Berlin declaring they had ‘no future’ in Germany surfaced to remind all of us there is still a way to go for complete restoration.
We pray for the day that Germany will recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital city and move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Please join in the prayers for that big move ahead.
Today, we rejoice at this amazing coming together of Germany and Israel. If God can bring such transformation in just over 70 years, then He can bring healing to other intractable situations around the world, including Israel’s ongoing conflict with Gaza and its neighbours. We pray for the day when Israel’s neighbours will be delivered from their demonic religious hatred, come to know the Messiah and embrace Israel’s right to exist.
I believe with all my heart that Israel’s ongoing restoration must continue to involve the wonderful care and love being poured out by German believers, and that Germany’s restoration must continue to include the Jewish people. Indeed, I, as a Messianic Jewish believer in Yeshua, commit myself fully to the healing and restoration of Germany and its people.
As we did in Stuttgart, let Germany and Israel stand together in this miraculous restoration, fulfilling God’s word and ‘looking unto Yeshua, the author and finisher of our faith’ (Hebrews 12:2).
Our responsibility as followers of Yeshua / Jesus is beautifully expressed in Hebrews 12:12-14, which says that we must ‘strengthen our hands which are hanging down, and our feeble knees’, so we can raise our hands in worship to the living God and humble ourselves before God on our knees. That way we will be healed, our nations will be healed, and we will be able to pray for healing over all in need of restoration.
We need to ‘pursue peace with all people’ and be holy and blameless before our Lord.