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🇮🇱 3️⃣ “ 🤞 🇹🇫 “ ️ THE VARIOUS HEBREW BIBLE DEFINITIONS OF THE PROMISED LAND 🇮🇱 3️⃣ “ 🤞 🇹🇫 “ ️ 🥶 ️by Hikaru Kitabayashi🥶 ️ There are three definitions of the “promised land“ in the Hebrew Bible. At a conference attended by members of the Knesset (the Israeli Parliament), a certain Rabbi Sharbaf refers to a promise made in Genesis by God to Abraham where God assigns all the land from the Nile to the Euphrates to Abraham’s descendants. The Rabbi obviously believes that this promise was limited to members of Judaic religious sects who are descendants of Abraham’s grandson, Jacob. But no one can offer documented proof of descent from Abraham. Moreover, in Genesis no mention is made of a son’s name or even of a religion, indicating that this promised applies to all of Abraham’s descendants. This would include not only the descendants of Sarah’s son, Isaac (the Hebrews of Israel and the Edomites who inhabited the Negev), but also Hagar’s son Ishmael (the present-day Arabs), and Abraham’s concubine Keturah’s six sons (in biblical times, the inhabitants of the Sinai and the desert areas of Jordan and northwestern Saudi Arabia). This would indicate that the land was given not only to believers in one sect or another of Judaism, but to all descendants of Abraham, no matter what religion they might have. There are also other Biblical definitions of the promised land that can be found in the Hebrew Bible. In Exodus, the promised land is described as extending from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean and from the desert to the River Euphrates (Exodus 23:20-33) and where the followers of Moses are commanded by the God of Moses the kill the inhabitants of these lands with no mercy and to take their property, something which Mr. Netanyahu’s government is today trying its best to do. In Numbers 34: 1-12, however, boundaries are given which describe a much smaller state that would include modern day Israel, minus the Negev and the Golan Heights, but including a small part of the Sinai, the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, almost all of Lebanon, and small areas of Syria. In Ezekial 47:3-23, roughly similar boundaries are given. with the main difference being that the boundaries of Ezekial include part of the Golan Heights. Ezekial, though, offers a radically different view of whom the promised land is given to. Verses 21-23 state the following: 21 So shall you divide this land according to the tribes of Israel. 22 And it shall come to pass, that you shall divide it by lot for an inheritance unto you and to the strangers that sojourn among you, who shall beget children among you; and they shall be unto you as the home-born among the children of Israel; they shall have inheritance with you among the tribes of Israel. 23 And it shall come to pass, that in whatever tribe the strangers sojourn, there shall you give him his inheritance, for so says the Lord GOD. So who are the strangers? They are not defined. Being undefined, isn’t it possible to interpret this passage as referring to all human beings, no matter what race or religion or language? Источник: Lord Of War
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