JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER. 1 COR 15:23-JESUS THE FIRST FRUITS-CHRISTIANS RAPTURED TO JESUS-FIRST FRUITS OF THE SPIRIT-23 But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming.ROMANS 8:23 And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.(THE PRE-TRIB RAPTURE)
DEAL FINALIZED.
Jeremiah 6:14
14 They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly, saying, Peace, peace; when there is no peace.
Isaiah 57:21
21 There is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked.
1 Thessalonians 5:3
3
For when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction
cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not
escape.
Ephesians 2:2
2 Wherein in time past ye walked
according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the
power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of
disobedience:
Israel and Hamas sign hostage-ceasefire deal in
Doha after mediators iron out final kinks-By Jacob Magid-Today, 3:00
am-JAN 16,25
Israeli and Hamas negotiating teams have signed a
hostage release and ceasefire deal in Doha, an Arab official from one of
the mediating countries confirms to The Times of Israel.The deal was
announced Wednesday, but the negotiating teams continued meeting
afterward in order to finalize implementation details, the official
says.A particular point of dispute was over the identities of the
Palestinian security prisoners slated for release, with Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu’s office issuing a statement early on Thursday
accusing Hamas of reneging on its commitments.The issue was ultimately
resolved by the mediators, allowing the Israeli and Hamas teams to move
forward with signing the agreement.While Israel’s decision-making
security cabinet and full cabinet had been originally been slated to
vote on the deal on Thursday, Netanyahu insisted on waiting until the
agreement was signed before holding a vote.The security cabinet meeting
has now been rescheduled for Friday. A subsequent vote before the full
cabinet is also required, but an Israeli official tells The Times of
Israel that it will only take place on Saturday, in what will likely
delay the start of the deal until Monday, instead of the originally
planned Sunday.After the full cabinet vote, a list of Palestinian
security prisoners to be freed will be published, and opponents will
have 48 hours to petition against these releases to the Supreme
Court.The Israeli official did not provide an explanation for why the
full cabinet vote couldn’t take place on Friday as well. However,
Channel 12 explained that it was decided by the Prime Minister’s Office
that if the original timetable were to be maintained, and a vote to be
taken tomorrow, this would mean opponents of the prisoner releases would
have almost no time to lodge appeals because of Shabbat. The court is
not expected to intervene in the releases.Channel 12 said judicial
sources have made clear that the formal 48-hour period for petitions can
be shortened, as happened ahead of the November 2023 truce, and that
the intended Sunday start of the deal need not be affected, but that the
Prime Minister’s Office was not persuaded.The deal is currently
scheduled to take effect on Sunday at 12:15 p.m., with the first three
hostages to be released soon after. If the Prime Minister’s Office
sticks to its reported new, delayed timetable, the first hostage
releases would go ahead on Monday — the day of US President-elect Donald
Trump’s inauguration.While far-right ministers Bezalel Smotrich and
Itamar Ben Gvir are expected to vote against the deal, it is still
expected to have enough support to pass both the security cabinet and
full cabinet votes.Netanyahu is still working to convince Smotrich to
back the deal. The prime minister’s Likud party issued a statement
Thursday claiming the US has given Israel guarantees that will allow it
to resume fighting after the first stage of the deal, as Smotrich has
demanded, in what would be an apparent violation of the deal’s terms.
US
president: There’s a genuine opportunity for a new future-Biden:
US-backed pressure on Iranian axis helped secure hostage deal, end of
Gaza war-Outgoing US officials acknowledge that cooperation from Trump’s
team provided boost, argue that Israel’s ‘defanging’ of Hezbollah
isolated Hamas enough for it to accept ceasefire By Jacob Magid-Today,
6:43 am-JAN 16,25
US President Joe Biden hailed the hostage
release and ceasefire agreement that his administration helped ink on
Wednesday, asserting that the deal will bring about a “permanent end of
the war” in Gaza after the second of the proposal’s three phases.“It’s a
very good afternoon,” Biden began in his White House address announcing
the agreement, which he had been working to deliver for the past seven
months since unveiling the terms of the proposal on May 31.That earlier
speech was seen as a savvy political move by Biden, who called on Hamas
to accept the three-phase framework, which the president revealed had
actually been approved by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu four days
earlier. By exposing the details publicly along with Netanyahu’s private
agreement to them, Washington hoped that half of the work was behind
it.But the months that followed saw significant Hamas intransigence,
along with Netanyahu walking back from the terms of his May 27
proposal.Hamas, through the summer, felt emboldened enough by the
support it was receiving from Iran and the Islamic Republic’s chief
proxy Hezbollah to continue fighting, with its leader at the time Yahya
Sinwar uninterested in a ceasefire, said a senior Biden administration
official briefing reporters after the Wednesday announcement.Netanyahu
meanwhile added conditions to his May 27 proposal regarding the
withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza, which led to the torpedoing of
negotiations in July, US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller
acknowledged in a separate Wednesday briefing.While Qatari and Egyptian
mediators along with members of Israel’s hostage negotiation team
privately blamed both sides for the lack of a deal to date, the Biden
administration has publicly maintained that Hamas was the main obstacle,
particularly since August.The senior US official told reporters that it
was then that the US shifted its approach to the Gaza war, prioritizing
the support of Israel “defanging” Hezbollah, based on the belief that
doing so would further isolate Hamas and lead the terror group to show
more flexibility in the ceasefire talks.The Biden aide also acknowledged
that the outgoing administration’s collaboration with US
President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team — particularly incoming
Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff — played a crucial role in bringing the deal
across the finish line.Senior Arab diplomats familiar with the
negotiations went further, saying it was the pressure that Witkoff put
on Netanyahu during a Saturday meeting in Jerusalem that helped secure a
breakthrough in the negotiations.Trump has repeatedly threatened “all
hell to pay” if the hostages are not released by January 20, and while
the message was directed at Hamas, Trump’s desire to end the war
required Israel to fall in line as well.Biden in his White House speech
argued that US-backed pressure on Hamas and weakening of the Iran-backed
Axis of Resistance against Israel led the terror group to eventually
agree to the deal that had been on the table since May.“We’ve reached
this point because of the pressure that Israel built on Hamas, backed by
the United States,” he said. Biden highlighted Israel’s October killing
of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar along with many of the terror group’s
senior commanders and thousands of its fighters, in addition to the
destruction of its military formations.He recalled how the US twice over
the past year helped Israel thwart missile attacks from “Hamas’
strongest supporter, Iran.” He did not mention the billions of dollars
in security assistance along with critical diplomatic cover that the US
provided Israel as the international community — and many Democratic
voters — turned on Jerusalem due to the Gaza humanitarian crisis sparked
by the war.But Biden did boast of having “shaped Israel’s strong and
calibrated response, [which] destroyed Iran’s air defenses but avoided…
an all-out war.” The president at the time publicly cautioned Israel
against hitting Iranian nuclear or oil sites.He also highlighted the
coalition that the US recruited to defend the Red Sea against Houthi
attacks — a mission that has not succeed in stopping the Iran-backed
Yemeni rebel group’s continued missile attacks against Israel and on
shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. The Houthis pledged to
continue attacks until a ceasefire is reached in Gaza.“The United States
helped to shape and change the equation, and the terror network that
once protected and sustained Hamas is far weaker. Iran is weaker than
has been in decades,” Biden said.467 days of failure, 1 day of
success-In answer to a question, the president noted: “This is the exact
framework of the deal I proposed back in May. Exact. And, we got the
world to endorse it.”The first phase will commence on Sunday and see the
release of 33 of the 98 hostages in exchange for roughly 1,000
Palestinian security prisoners and a partial Israeli withdrawal from
Gaza. The second phase will see the release of the remaining living
hostages and will conclude with a permanent end to the war and full
Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. The third phase will see Hamas release the
remaining bodies of hostages in its possession.During the first phase,
Israel and Hamas will resume negotiations aimed at agreeing to terms for
phase two, “which is a permanent end of the war — let me say it again, a
permanent end of the war,” Biden asserted in his speech.If those talks
extend longer than the first phase’s 42 days, the ceasefire will remain
in place, as long as the parties remain at the negotiating table.Biden
said he’s spoken to the leaders of Qatar and Egypt and all three have
pledged that the negotiations will keep moving forward “for as long as
it takes.”Netanyahu had long insisted that he would not agree to
permanently end the war until Hamas’s governing and military
capabilities have been dismantled, and sought — apparently
unsuccessfully — during negotiations to ensure that Israel could resume
fighting after the first stage.While Netanyahu is facing immense
pressure from his far-right coalition partners to resume fighting after
the first phase, Biden said he was “confident” that Israel and Hamas
will reach phase two of the agreement.The hostage negotiation that
climaxed Wednesday was one of the most difficult of his career, Biden
said.“I’m deeply satisfied this day has come for the sake of the people
of Israel and the [hostages’] families of waiting in agony, for the sake
of the innocent people in Gaza who suffered unimaginable devastation
because of the war,” Biden said. “The Palestinian people have gone
through hell. Too many innocent people have died. Too many communities
have been destroyed.”“This has been a time of real turmoil in the Middle
East, but as I prepare to leave office, our friends are strong, our
enemies are weak, and there’s a genuine opportunity for a new future,”
Biden said.He also suggested that the hostage deal could lead to the
creation of a “credible pathway” to a Palestinian state. This would
require Israeli acquiescence, which Jerusalem has repeatedly made clear
it will not grant.He then cited former US senator and Northern Ireland
peace negotiator George Mitchell’s quote that “diplomacy is 700 days of
failure and one day of success,” which he paraphrased.“We’ve had many
difficult days since the Hamas began this terrible war. We’ve
encountered roadblocks and setbacks. But we haven’t given up. And now,
after more than 400 days of struggle, a day of success has arrived,”
Biden concluded.The Trump factor-Before departing, Biden was asked
whether he or Trump should get credit for the deal.“Is that a joke?” he
responded, apparently insulted by the question.But to many onlookers,
the shouted query seemed legitimate.“This EPIC ceasefire agreement could
have only happened as a result of our Historic Victory in November, as
it signaled to the entire World that my Administration would seek Peace
and negotiate deals to ensure the safety of all Americans, and our
Allies,” Trump wrote in a celebratory post on Truth Social.Biden
acknowledged in his speech that while the deal was negotiated by his
administration, it will be implemented by the incoming Trump
administration.“In these past few days, we’ve been speaking as one
team,” he said, stressing that he had instructed his aides after the
election to coordinate with Trump’s team.Miller was a bit more effusive,
subsequently telling reporters that the involvement of Trump’s team had
“been absolutely critical in getting this deal over the line.Miller
said that the cooperation between outgoing White House Mideast czar
Brett McGurk and incoming Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff, who sat together
at the negotiation table over the past week may well have been
unprecedented and demonstrated the power of bipartisanship.The senior US
official said they periodically split up, with McGurk staying back in
Doha on Saturday to lead the negotiations, while Witkoff flew to Israel
to meet with Netanyahu.Netanyahu held separate calls with Biden and
Trump on Wednesday night to express his gratitude for their
efforts.According to a statement from the Prime Minister’s Office,
Netanyahu thanked Trump for his “help in advancing the release of the
hostages and helping Israel to bring an end to the suffering of dozens
of hostages and their families.”Netanyahu also thanked the incoming US
president for his comments earlier today that Gaza will “NEVER again
become a terrorist safe haven.” The pair agreed to meet soon in
Washington, Netanyahu’s office said. The Israeli readout on Netanyahu’s
call with Biden was shorter and less detailed.The senior US official
briefing reporters said the Netanyahu-Biden call was warm and that the
two leaders reflected on the horrors of October 7 and the plight of the
hostages and the joy of being able to reunite them with their families.
Netanyahu also noted that he and Biden had experienced a significant
number of historical moments throughout their 44 years knowing each
other, the senior US official said.