December 29, 2025

December, 29, 2025
December 29, 2025

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World news biblically understood

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The Shocking Killings Of Yaron And Sarah Must Be A Wake-up Call To The Church

Chris Katulka

The tragic and senseless murders of Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim on the streets of Washington, D.C., are far more than another headline—they should stir the conscience of the global Church.

Both Yaron and Sarah were staff members at the Israeli Embassy, devoted defenders of the Jewish state. Their lives were cut short in what authorities are investigating as a blatant act of antisemitic terrorism. Let that sink in—Jewish people are being gunned down in the U.S. capital for their support of Israel.

But this tragedy reaches even deeper. Yaron and Sarah were not only emissaries of Israel; they were also followers of Jesus the Messiah.

According to All Israel News, family and friends described Yaron as “a devout Christian” and “a super solid believer.” His faith in Jesus and trust in God’s Word only deepened his passion for the people and land of Israel. His life testified to the truth that loving the Jewish people is not merely political—it is profoundly biblical.

In their deaths, we witness a powerful intersection between the Jewish and Christian communities—a moment that reveals just how deeply connected our stories truly are. These two Jewish believers in Jesus were killed for the “hope of Israel” (Acts 28:20), the very phrase the Apostle Paul used to describe the unbreakable link between his faith in the Messiah and God’s promises to His people.

The Bible that Christians cherish is a Jewish book. Its foundation rests on the covenant God made with Abraham: “Through you all the families of the earth will be blessed” (Genesis 12:3). This divine promise weaves through every page of Scripture, from Genesis to Revelation, binding the destinies of the Church and the Jewish people together. To honor Yaron and Sarah is to remember that our faith as Christians is not separate from Israel—it is grafted into it.

The Jewish people have endured centuries of hatred, scapegoating, and violence. Since the horrors of October 7, 2023, antisemitism has surged with alarming boldness—even in places once considered safe. For Yaron and Sarah, that hatred crossed borders and invaded their very mission, their service, and their faith.

This must be a wake-up call to the Church: Yaron and Sarah were part of us, too.

Now is not the time for silence or apathy. Antisemitism is not merely a political or social issue—it is a spiritual evil that opposes the heart and purposes of God. It is the same darkness that has resisted God’s redemptive work through Israel and the Church throughout history.

The Apostle Paul warned Gentile believers not to boast against the Jewish people. In Romans 11, he reminds us that the Church does not support the root—the root supports us. Our faith in Jesus, the Jewish Messiah, is built on the promises God made to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Turning our backs on Israel is to forget the very foundation of our gospel hope.

For Bible-believing Christians, standing against antisemitism should not be controversial—it should be instinctive. Scripture calls us to bless whom God has blessed. As Balaam declared under divine compulsion, “How can I curse whom God has not cursed? And how can I denounce whom the Lord has not denounced?” (Numbers 23:8). God has blessed the Jewish people—and so should we.

Church, it is time to rise.

Let us pray for the peace of Jerusalem. Let us stand with the Jewish people in love, in truth, and in solidarity. Let us speak out boldly against antisemitism in all its forms—whether cloaked in political rhetoric, academic ideology, or raw violence. And let us not grow weary in doing good, knowing that our King—the King of Israel—is coming back to Jerusalem.

Yaron and Sarah’s witness did not end in death. It now lives on as a clarion call to the Church. May we answer it with faithfulness, courage, and conviction.


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Does The Silence In Most Churches Today Regarding Biblical Prophecy Grieve The Savior?

Jesus wept for the people of Israel long ago because they did not recognize that their Messiah walked among them. Does He not feel a similar grief when pastors and believers push biblical prophecy aside and fix their hope on earthly aspirations? I believe so. Bible prophecy is not just about recognizing the signs and drawing peoples’ attention to the lateness of the hour in which we live, although these things are vitally important. Its primary focus must be Jesus and the eager expectation of His appearing (Philippians 3:20-21).

The Great Crisis of 2026: The Endless Pursuit Of Malleable ‘Truth’

Without knowable truth, everything rests on opinions, and opinions mold themselves into whatever shape seems most convenient. In such an existence, the thing we call “truth” becomes a mere justification for our desires and feelings. In politics, truth has become a commodity to be manufactured, bought, and sold — something that can be molded to fit the tastes of whatever audience the politician wants to reach at that moment. While freedom from objective truth can at first feel liberating, it eventually entraps and entombs people in a nightmare of shifting ground.

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In A Grief Stricken Australia, A Question Swirls: Why Were All The Warnings Ignored?

By now, I am sure you are all aware of the terrorist act perpetrated against Sydney’s Jewish community on the first night of Hanukkah in the iconic Sydney suburb of Bondi Beach. The warnings issued by Australia’s Jewish community since October 7 had largely been ignored by our ruling class. Now, we see the heartbreaking result of ignoring those warnings. Jewish men, women and children are dead, Jewish shops intend to close permanently for security reasons, and an entire community is in mourning. 

ABC's of Salvation

Decision

UTT

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Israel My Glory

Chris Katulka

The tragic and senseless murders of Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim on the streets of Washington, D.C., are far more than another headline—they should stir the conscience of the global Church.

Both Yaron and Sarah were staff members at the Israeli Embassy, devoted defenders of the Jewish state. Their lives were cut short in what authorities are investigating as a blatant act of antisemitic terrorism. Let that sink in—Jewish people are being gunned down in the U.S. capital for their support of Israel.

But this tragedy reaches even deeper. Yaron and Sarah were not only emissaries of Israel; they were also followers of Jesus the Messiah.

According to All Israel News, family and friends described Yaron as “a devout Christian” and “a super solid believer.” His faith in Jesus and trust in God’s Word only deepened his passion for the people and land of Israel. His life testified to the truth that loving the Jewish people is not merely political—it is profoundly biblical.

In their deaths, we witness a powerful intersection between the Jewish and Christian communities—a moment that reveals just how deeply connected our stories truly are. These two Jewish believers in Jesus were killed for the “hope of Israel” (Acts 28:20), the very phrase the Apostle Paul used to describe the unbreakable link between his faith in the Messiah and God’s promises to His people.

The Bible that Christians cherish is a Jewish book. Its foundation rests on the covenant God made with Abraham: “Through you all the families of the earth will be blessed” (Genesis 12:3). This divine promise weaves through every page of Scripture, from Genesis to Revelation, binding the destinies of the Church and the Jewish people together. To honor Yaron and Sarah is to remember that our faith as Christians is not separate from Israel—it is grafted into it.

The Jewish people have endured centuries of hatred, scapegoating, and violence. Since the horrors of October 7, 2023, antisemitism has surged with alarming boldness—even in places once considered safe. For Yaron and Sarah, that hatred crossed borders and invaded their very mission, their service, and their faith.

This must be a wake-up call to the Church: Yaron and Sarah were part of us, too.

Now is not the time for silence or apathy. Antisemitism is not merely a political or social issue—it is a spiritual evil that opposes the heart and purposes of God. It is the same darkness that has resisted God’s redemptive work through Israel and the Church throughout history.

The Apostle Paul warned Gentile believers not to boast against the Jewish people. In Romans 11, he reminds us that the Church does not support the root—the root supports us. Our faith in Jesus, the Jewish Messiah, is built on the promises God made to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Turning our backs on Israel is to forget the very foundation of our gospel hope.

For Bible-believing Christians, standing against antisemitism should not be controversial—it should be instinctive. Scripture calls us to bless whom God has blessed. As Balaam declared under divine compulsion, “How can I curse whom God has not cursed? And how can I denounce whom the Lord has not denounced?” (Numbers 23:8). God has blessed the Jewish people—and so should we.

Church, it is time to rise.

Let us pray for the peace of Jerusalem. Let us stand with the Jewish people in love, in truth, and in solidarity. Let us speak out boldly against antisemitism in all its forms—whether cloaked in political rhetoric, academic ideology, or raw violence. And let us not grow weary in doing good, knowing that our King—the King of Israel—is coming back to Jerusalem.

Yaron and Sarah’s witness did not end in death. It now lives on as a clarion call to the Church. May we answer it with faithfulness, courage, and conviction.


Trusted Analysis From A Biblical Worldview

Help reach the lost and equip the church with the living and active truth of God's Word in our world today.

YOU CARE ABOUT

BIBLICAL TRUTH. SO DO WE.

 

Together, We Can Deliver A Biblical Understanding

Of News Events Around The World.

Does The Silence In Most Churches Today Regarding Biblical Prophecy Grieve The Savior?

Jesus wept for the people of Israel long ago because they did not recognize that their Messiah walked among them. Does He not feel a similar grief when pastors and believers push biblical prophecy aside and fix their hope on earthly aspirations? I believe so. Bible prophecy is not just about recognizing the signs and drawing peoples’ attention to the lateness of the hour in which we live, although these things are vitally important. Its primary focus must be Jesus and the eager expectation of His appearing (Philippians 3:20-21).

The Great Crisis of 2026: The Endless Pursuit Of Malleable ‘Truth’

Without knowable truth, everything rests on opinions, and opinions mold themselves into whatever shape seems most convenient. In such an existence, the thing we call “truth” becomes a mere justification for our desires and feelings. In politics, truth has become a commodity to be manufactured, bought, and sold — something that can be molded to fit the tastes of whatever audience the politician wants to reach at that moment. While freedom from objective truth can at first feel liberating, it eventually entraps and entombs people in a nightmare of shifting ground.

untitled artwork 6391

In A Grief Stricken Australia, A Question Swirls: Why Were All The Warnings Ignored?

By now, I am sure you are all aware of the terrorist act perpetrated against Sydney’s Jewish community on the first night of Hanukkah in the iconic Sydney suburb of Bondi Beach. The warnings issued by Australia’s Jewish community since October 7 had largely been ignored by our ruling class. Now, we see the heartbreaking result of ignoring those warnings. Jewish men, women and children are dead, Jewish shops intend to close permanently for security reasons, and an entire community is in mourning. 

ABC's of Salvation

TV AD

worldview matters

Decision Magazine V AD

Decision

Jan Markell

Israel My Glory

Erick Stakelbeck

untitled artwork

YOU CARE ABOUT

BIBLICAL TRUTH.

SO DO WE.

Together, We Can Deliver A Biblical Understanding Of News Events Around The World And Equip The Church To Stand With A Biblical Worldview.

Israel My Glory

untitled artwork

YOU CARE ABOUT

BIBLICAL TRUTH.

SO DO WE.

 

Together, We Can Deliver A Biblical Understanding Of News Events Around The World And Equip The Church To Stand With A Biblical Worldview.