Lord of the Breakthrough: What God is Doing in Israel

One of the names of God is Baal-perazim which means “Lord of the Breakthrough”… and it seems like a very good time to call on God by this name right now. We have seen God do some wonderful things in our midst here at ONE FOR ISRAEL, in our outreach and our Bible college, and we are expecting more breakthroughs to come!

The name “Lord of the Breakthrough” first appears in the Bible during the life of King David. The story appears in 2 Samuel chapter 5, and is repeated in the retelling of Israel’s history by the priests, in the book of Chronicles.1  It began when the Philistines heard that David had been anointed king, so they went to hunt him down. They gathered in the Valley of the Rephaim, or giants. In short, the situation was looking pretty scary. David, however, did what he always did when things started to look alarming. He prayed.

And David inquired of the Lord, “Shall I go up against the Philistines? Will you give them into my hand?” And the Lord said to David,“ Go up, for I will certainly give the Philistines into your hand.” And David came to Baal-perazim, and David defeated them there. And he said, “The Lord has broken through my enemies before me like a breaking flood.” Therefore the name of that place is called Baal-perazim. (2 Samuel 5:19-20)

Baal means “lord” and perazim means “breakthroughs” or “breaches.” God smashed through David’s circumstances to bring victory, despite what looked like impossible odds. He is very good at that.

There is no wall, no barrier, that the Lord of the Breakthrough cannot overcome. As a friend of mine says, God loves to stack up the odds against Himself and then display His glorious might by overcoming them. Like He did at the Red Sea, for example. What a breakthrough! And He is still working wonders among us today.

Breakthrough at our Bible college

We have seen the Lord of the Breakthrough at work in major ways here at ONE FOR ISRAEL. For much of the last century it was extremely rare to hear of Israeli Jews coming to faith in Yeshua, but a big breakthrough came about 15 years ago and the situation has changed radically. Once the internet was in everyone’s hands, we started to see many finding faith through Google searches. Israeli congregations have grown enormously. A large percentage of the new believers said they came to faith after finding our videos and materials online.

Another major breakthrough came, like a spiritual sonic boom, in 2014. It used to be that Jewish and Arab congregations had almost nothing to do with one another. Jewish and Arab congregations meet on different days (Saturday and Sunday respectively), they worship in different languages (Hebrew and Arabic) and the cultural gap is vast. Most knew nothing about the other. There were occasional get togethers for prayer but these were annual events at best. There were very few real relationships between the two communities of believers and the situation looked bleak. Not too bleak for God though!

Baal-perezim, the Lord of the breakthrough, did it again when our Bible college opened up a new program to train senior pastors. Many Israeli pastors, both Jewish and Arab, found themselves in leadership positions without formal training — some had just started Bible study groups that grew into congregations, while others wanted to brush up on their biblical knowledge and ministry training.

When the semester began, 11 Jewish pastors and 13 Arab pastors showed up for a year of study together.

The bridges and relationships that have been built at the Bible college have changed the landscape of the body of Messiah in Israel, even till today.

Though both Jewish and Arab pastors who came to study with us admitted that before they came they didn’t know anything about the “other side,” great friendships and trust developed as they learned, shoulder to shoulder, how to build the kingdom of God in their congregations, communities, and in the Land we all live in. It was a seismic shift in the situation here in Israel. The two communities started to connect in ways that hadn’t happened before.

“It has been incredible to experience the blessing in getting to know each other, and tasting heaven in the love and unity among these precious brothers,” Dr Erez Soref said at the end of the first year. “We were able to discuss difficult and painful issues in a spirit of love and forgiveness. We learned to be transparent with each other in challenging and personal issues, sharing hearts.”

He continued, “We have concluded this year with a few days of discussing various leadership issues, praying for each one, washing each other’s feet, and taking the Lord’s supper.”

Together in unity

Messianic Jewish pastor, Meno Kalisher, heads up Beit Geula (House of Redemption) a Messianic congregation in Jerusalem. He was one of the Jewish pastors who came to study the course in 2014 and admitted afterwards, “The Arab pastors for me were new creatures. Totally new. I didn’t know them before. 
But when you put all our guys together, listen, we had fun!”

Beit Geula has both Jews and Arabs as well as others from the nations in the congregation, and Pastor Meno recently performed a wedding of an Arab and American couple there, who are part of their community. Today there is also an Arab outreach team which is an integral part of the congregation.

Meanwhile, Arab Pastor Saleem Shalash had his own apprehensions and questions leading up to the course ten years ago. “Are they really believers? Do they believe in the Messiah? Believe in Jesus?” He wondered about his Jewish counterparts. “What will I share with them? And how do they accept me Arab pastor and how do I accept them as, you know, Jewish pastors? 
… How do they pray, how do they worship, how do they teach the word of God? Is it the same like us?”

Pastor Salem says today that studying alongside Jewish pastors as brothers in Messiah completely changed him. “I felt that we were fulfilling a prophecy,” he said, adding that the whole experience was “like heaven on earth, half Jewish, half Arab, studying together.”

Now, his church in Nazareth, Jesus the King, is dedicated to serving Jewish people in Israel and taking them aid along with the Gospel.

When an Arab knocks at a Jewish door

Show the world you are One for Israel!