Scripture Reveals that in the latter days, the people of the Promised Land will be at rest, dwelling safely and living in unwalled villages (Ezk. 38:11). The past several years have found the Middle East to be anything but a safe, peaceful and restful environment. One suicide bomber follows another and in an attempt to stop the bloodshed, Israel has been building a wall around the occupied territories.

The wall

When completed, the wall will stretch 400 miles in length and be, on average, 25 feet high. The most obvious historical parallel to the wall is the Berlin wall which was 96 miles

long and 12 feet high. The Israeli wall is set to be four times as long and twice as high. From the start, the wall or barrier was surrounded in controversy as to its overall purpose. The Israeli government indicates that the barrier will be used to help curb the growing number of suicide bombings; on the other hand, the Palestinians claim that the wall is nothing more than a land grab by the Israelis used to circumvent the Palestinians from formulating an undivided nation.

For their part, the Israelis indicate that more than 800 civilians have been murdered in the past three years by terrorists, and thousands more have been injured. In turn, the Palestinians point out that the barrier will divide their nations into separate entities while at the same time allowing Israel to claim extra land that rightly belongs to Palestine.

The courts

In order to stop the construction of the barrier the Palestinian government decided to seek a legal remedy. They took the matter to both the world court international Court of Justice in The Hague) and the Israeli court. In 2003 the United Nations General Assembly asked the International Court of Justice to consider the barrier issue. When hearings began in February, 2004, the battle lines were quickly drawn as Arab nations lined up in support of the Palestinian position and Israel’s usual allies backed the barrier. It is the position of the Israeli government that the international court has no jurisdiction to rule on what it considers a political — not legal — dispute with the Palestinians.

As a result, the Palestinians took the dispute to the Israeli courts and on March 1, 2004, the court ordered a temporary halt to construction on the wall. Start for-on-line reported on March 5, 2004 that: “The court ruling is not a condemnation of Sharon’s (Israel’s Prime Minister) plan, but a quibble over details. This is not to say that construction will forge ahead at full speed; the plan has no shortage of opponents…Sharon’s core goal is to gain the upper hand in determining Israeli borders in order to make it a geo strategically viable state and prevent any future Palestine from being sufficiently cohesive to pose a security threat to Israel.”

Unwalled villages

Since the latter day prophecies include the Middle East living at peace and in unwalled villages, it could be concluded that the Master’s return will not be for some time yet. As the collapse of the Berlin wall will testify, however, walls can come down very quickly. And we have no idea how much time will take place between the Lord’s return to gather the responsible for judgment and when he will make his first public appearance to Israel. Rather than become lax, we need to remember the warning, “n such an hour as ye think not, the Son of man cometh.”