Nuggets from "Judgment Day: Islam, Israel, and the Nations" by Dave Hunt | thebereancall.org

Hunt, Dave

Nuggets from "Judgment Day: Islam, Israel, and the Nations" by Dave Hunt

As an important part of their deliverance from Egypt, the Israelites were commanded to kill a lamb for each household, sprinkle its blood on the house frame around the door, roast it, and eat it in readiness to leave Egypt on the night that God delivered them. Thereafter, as a memorial of this miraculous event, they were to keep the feast of the Passover each year forever. The Passover is not like the Hajj and Ramadan, both of which had been practiced by pagan Arab tribes for centuries before the Muslims began to claim them as their own. The Passover is unique to the Jews, and it began the day they were delivered from slavery in Egypt.

Furthermore, in another amazing and confirming prophecy, God declared that, in spite of breaking the Ten Commandments,and in spite of breaking and even abandoning the many other ordinances that He would give them, they would keep the Passover forever. Only one people on earth, the Jews, keep the Passover. And they continue to do so, exactly as God foretold, in spite of the fact that most Jews today do not take their Scriptures seriously. Here is the final proof that they are the heirs whose ancestores were slaves in Egypt, that they were miraculously delivered by God, and as a result were brought back to conquer Canaan, where their patriarchs had already lived for three hundred years.

More than 90 percent fo Jews worldwide keep the Passover every year. This same percentage holds true among those living in Israel, even though very few believe the Bible and about 30 percent claim to be atheists. This is an undeniable fulfillment of a specific prophecy. To see how remarkable this is, note two well-known comparisons. The "prophets" in Rome declared that the sacred fires of the goddess Vesta, tended by the Vestal Virgins, would never go out. They went out. The Zoroastrian prophets swore that their sacred fires would never go out. They were extinguished in the Muslim invasion of Persia in the seventh century. God said Israel would keep the Passover forever, and Jews worldwide still keep it today.