How the Changing Landscape in the Middle East Will Affect the ChurchBy Jack ZimmermanPicture this: white, sandy beaches; clear blue, sparkling ocean; luxurious hotels; gorgeous sunsets; peace; tranquility. Sounds great, doesn’t it. So where are we. The Caribbean, perhaps. Maybe Hawaii. The Bahamas.
One of the hallmarks of Yeshua’s ministry on Earth was His compassion for the broken. Wherever He went, He healed diseases, cast out demons, and set captives free from both physical and spiritual bondage.
Have you heard of the Boycott, Divest, and Sanction (BDS) movement. If you’re a student on a college campus, or if you’re involved with businesses or organizations doing business with Israel, you may be familiar with BDS initiatives.

More Jewish people live in America than anywhere else in the world, with the possible exception of Israel. And yet, efforts to reach the Jewish people with the Good News have not been very successful in the U.S.

Sukkot, The Feast of Booths (known to some as the Feast of Tabernacles) is the seventh and last festival on the biblical calendar.
The back-breaking work of clearing stones from a field in Tach Gayint, Ethiopia, has been for the JVMI team both a prophetic picture and our prayer for a new frontier of ministry.
My God. How had anyone been able to stand me. Why hadn’t somebody killed me long before now. I didn’t like the sudden blinding revelation that showed me to myself—the revelation that I, who had always thought I was so wonderful, was a total washout as a person. It sickened. It hurt.
By Bill McKayThe entwined history of Jews and Christians has, as a part of its chronicle, remarkable high points and destructive low points in its 2000 years.
Revived Roman Empire, the Mark of the Beast, the Sixth Seal, the Ten Horns, Gog and Magog, the Twelfth Imam, the Antichrist, the Abomination of Desolation, the New World Order, 666 . . . Does all of this confuse you. If it does, you’re not alone.