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)
ON FIRST DAY OF HANNUKAH IN AUSTRALIA 12 ISRAELIS KILLED, 29 INJURED IN 2 TERROR ATTACK SHOOTERS.
MURDER
JEREMIAH 1:5
5
Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee;(GOD ORDAINED OR LIVES
BEFORE WE WERE EVEN CREATED IN A WOMANS BODY)(GOD NEVER CREATED ANYONE
HOMOSEXUAL)(AND THIS TELLS US ABORTION IS MURDER) and before thou camest
forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a prophet
unto the nations.
GENESIS 4:8-11 (THE FIRST MURDER)
8 And Cain
talked with Abel his brother: and it came to pass, when they were in
the field, that Cain rose up against Abel his brother, and slew him.
9 And the LORD said unto Cain, Where is Abel thy brother? And he said, I know not: Am I my brother's keeper?
10 And he said, What hast thou done? the voice of thy brother's blood crieth unto me from the ground.
11 And now art thou cursed from the earth, which hath opened her mouth to receive thy brother's blood from thy hand;
GENESIS 6:11-13 (EARTH DESTROYED BECAUSE OF TERRORISM,MURDERS)
11 The earth also was corrupt before God, and the earth was filled with violence.
12 And God looked upon the earth, and, behold, it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted his way upon the earth.
13
And God said unto Noah, The end of all flesh is come before me; for the
earth is filled with violence through them; and, behold, I will destroy
them with the earth.
JOHN 8:44
44 Ye are of your father the
devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from
the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in
him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar,
and the father of it.
EXODUS 20:13
13 Thou shalt not kill.(Murder)(THAT INCLUDES ABORTION)
MATTHEW 18:6
6
But whoso shall offend (HURT) one of these little ones (CHILDREN) which
believe in me,(JESUS) it were better for him that a millstone were
hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the
sea.(THATS THE DEATH PENALTY FOLKS)
EXODUS 21:12
12 He that smiteth (MURDER)a man,(OR BABY) so that he die, shall be surely put to death.(THATS THE DEATH PENALTY PEOPLE)
REVELATION 9:20-21
20
And the rest of the men which were not killed by these plagues yet
repented not of the works of their hands, that they should not worship
devils,(OCCULT) and idols of gold, and silver, and brass, and stone, and
of wood: which neither can see, nor hear, nor walk:
21 Neither repented they of their murders, (WEAPONS) nor of their sorceries,(DRUG ADDICTION-AND SELLING DRUGS)
'Worst
attack on Jews anywhere in the world since October 7'-‘Horrified, not
shocked’: Australian Jews blame Bondi attack on ongoing
‘incitement’Community leaders say government has failed to respond to
burgeoning antisemitism since the October 7, 2023, attack, leaving
Jewish people fearful-By Zev Stub-Today, 3:02 pm-DEC 14,25
For
many Australians, Sunday’s terror attack at a Hanukkah party at Bondi
Beach near Sydney felt all but inevitable following years of escalating
antisemitic violence and rhetoric.According to authorities, at least 11
people were killed, as well as one of the two gunmen who opened fire at a
family Hanukkah event attended by some 2,000 Jews from the Sydney area.
At least 13 were critically injured, including two police officers.“I’m
horrified and devastated that this happened, but not shocked,” Lynda
Ben-Menashe, president of the National Council of Jewish Women
Australia, told The Times of Israel. “Over the past two years,
antisemitism has been rising by the month, and the government has not
listened to our pleas. When there is no visible consequence to
incitement, violence always ensues.”Since Hamas attacked Israel on
October 7, 2023, sparking the Gaza war and setting off a tidal wave of
antisemitism across the globe, Australia’s 120,000-strong Jewish
community has been among the hardest hit.Over the past year, Jews in
Australia have seen synagogues, schools and homes firebombed, two nurses
threatening to kill Jewish patients in their hospital, and the
discovery of a trailer filled with explosives said to have been intended
to cause a mass-casualty event at a Sydney synagogue.“I’m trying to
process what impact this is going to have on the Jewish community of
Australia,” said Jeremy Leibler, president of the Zionist Federation of
Australia. “This may be the worst attack on Jews anywhere in the world
since October 7, and it’s the second-worst mass shooting in Australian
history. I don’t know what happens now.”Victims of the attack included
several leaders of the country’s Jewish community. Rabbi Eli Schlanger, a
Chabad emissary in Sydney, was killed, according to a statement from
the Chabad movement.Among those wounded in the shooting were Arsen
Ostrovsky, a human rights lawyer and head of the Australia/Israel &
Jewish Affairs Council (AIJAC) branch in Sydney, and Evan Zlatkis,
director of media at the Executive Council of Australian Jewry.“This is
what the current government has allowed to come into our country and go
unchecked,” Tali Shine, an Australian newscaster, told The Times of
Israel following the attack. “When nothing was done about the
radicalized protests outside the Opera House [shortly after October 7],
it set the tone [for continued attacks on the Jewish
community].”Escalating antisemitism-Two weeks ago, the Executive Council
of Australian Jewry (ECAJ) said the country had seen 1,654 antisemitic
incidents during the 12-month period from October 1, 2024, to September
30, 2025 — about five times the annual average recorded in the decade
prior to the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack.The previous year, the first
after the October 7 attack, saw an even higher 2,062 incidents, ECAJ
noted. Australians now feel that antisemitism has become mainstreamed
throughout all aspects of national life, the group said.“We are now at a
stage where anti-Jewish racism has left the fringes of society and
become… normalized and allowed to fester and spread, gaining ground at
universities, in arts and culture spaces, in the health sector, in the
workplace and elsewhere,” the report said.A survey published several
months ago by the National Council of Jewish Women Australia found that
more than half of Australian Jewish women feel unsafe, and that
two-fifths actively hide their Jewish identities.About 10 percent of
women said they were considering leaving Australia, a number that “is
probably jumping even higher today,” Ben-Menashe, of the National
Council of Jewish Women Australia, said.After the community saw a record
number of attacks in 2023-2024, an arson attack in December on
Melbourne’s Adass Israel Synagogue was seen by many as a turning point,
and Jews have been frustrated by what they say has been the government’s
failure to rein in attacks and violent rhetoric.In August, Australian
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese revealed that Iran was suspected of
being behind a pair of 2024 antisemitic arson attacks, calling the
actions “dangerous acts of aggression” designed to undermine his
country’s social cohesion.The country’s decision in August to recognize a
Palestinian state at the United Nations General Assembly further
aggravated the growing sense of alienation among the country’s Jewish
community and sparked a sharp war of words between Albanese’s government
and Israeli officials.Following Sunday’s attack, the Australia/Israel
& Jewish Affairs Council said it was “horrified” by the shooting,
noting that the organization had warned of the potential for
violence.“This is not just a terrible day for the Jewish community, for
Bondi, and for Sydney but for all of Australia, and for the values we
hold dear, that are the bedrock of what for so long has been our
inclusive, harmonious society,” AIJAC executive director Colin
Rubenstein said in a statement. “We are horrified by what has unfolded.
Our immediate thoughts are with those killed and injured and their
families, and with all those who witnessed this horrendous crime.”AIJAC
has warned for years that “the unceasing antisemitic vitriol on our
streets would evolve into antisemitic violence if left unchecked,” he
said. “We have warned that verbal abuse becomes graffiti, becomes arson,
becomes physical violence, becomes murder.“This is the outcome of the
calls we have heard far too often at marches through our cities to
globalize the intifada and that all Zionists are terrorists,” Rubenstein
added. “Our governments and authorities must act to end this hateful
incitement.”Others said the attack showed that no one in Australia is
safe from antisemitic violence.“We’ve seen a constant barrage of hate
coming from the right, the left, and the Islamists, and it was just a
matter of time before something like this happened,” Ben-Menashe said.
“The fact that this happened at Australia’s most iconic location shows
that no Australian is safe.”
Rubio condemns Sydney attack, says US prayers are ‘with the Jewish community’By Reuters Today, 3:38 pm-DEC 14,25
The
United States “strongly condemns” the attack at Sydney’s Bondi Beach in
which 11 people were killed and almost 30 wounded when gunmen fired on a
Hanukkah event, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio posts.“Antisemitism
has no place in this world. Our prayers are with the victims of this
horrific attack, the Jewish community, and the people of Australia,”
Rubio writes in a post on X.
Chabad rabbi killed in Bondi Hanukkah massacre was ‘warm, well-liked’By Zev Stub-Today, 4:01 pm-DEC 14,25
The
Chabad rabbi who was killed in the terror attack at a Hanukkah party at
Bondi Beach was “a warm individual, full of energy and very well
liked,” a spokesperson for the movement says.Rabbi Eli Schlanger, the
assistant rabbi at Chabad of Bondi in Sydney, was one of at least 11
killed in the terror attack. At least 13 were seriously
injured.According to Chabad, the 40-year-old rabbi was born in England,
and studied at Yeshiva Tomchei Tmimim in Brunoy, France. He received his
rabbinic ordination at the central Lubavitch yeshiva in Crown
Heights.Schlanger is survived by his wife and children, including a
2-month-old baby.In an interview about Australia’s rising antisemitism
on the Chabad website in March, Schlanger encouraged Jews to stand
proudly in the face of hatred.“My car — emblazoned with mitzvah symbols —
is a living example of pride and resilience,” he said then.He
encouraged others to embrace their Jewish identities more strongly as a
response to growing hate.“Be more Jewish, act more Jewish and appear
more Jewish,” he said at the time.“Now it’s our turn to step up and live
that out,” the spokesman says.
Bloodied but ‘okay,’ Arsen
Ostrovsky, who just moved from Israel to Sydney, describes ‘blood
gushing in front of me’ on Bondi Beach-DEC 14,25
Bandaged and his
face covered in blood, Arsen Ostrovsky, an international human rights
lawyer who recently moved from Israel to Sydney to work with the local
Jewish community, has described the deadly terror attack as it unfolded
around him and his family.In an interview with Australian television,
Ostrovsky, who chairs the Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council
in Sydney, describes the onslaught: “I was here with my family. It was a
Hanukkah celebration. There were hundreds of people. There were
children, there were elderly. Families enjoying themselves. Children,
kids, at a festival, playing. Then all of a sudden, it’s absolute chaos.
There’s guns, fire everywhere, people ducking. It was absolute chaos.
We didn’t know what was happening, where the gunfire was coming from.”“I
saw blood gushing in front of me,” he goes on. “I saw people hit, saw
people fall to the ground. My only concern was, Where are my kids? Where
are my kids? Where’s my wife? Where’s my family?”“I lived in Israel the
last 13 years,” he continues. “We came here only two weeks ago to work
with a Jewish community, to fight antisemitism, to fight this
bloodthirsty, ravaging hatred.”Recalling Hamas’s October 7, 2023,
invasion and massacre in Israel, he says: “We’ve lived through worse.
We’re going to get through this, and we’re going to get the bastards
that did this.”Asked whether he saw the gunmen, Ostrovsky replies: “I
did. I saw at least one gunman firing, with what looked like a shotgun,
firing randomly in all directions. I saw children falling to the floor,
elderly…”“It was an absolute bloodbath, blood gushing everywhere.
October seventh, that’s the last time I saw this,” he notes. (Ostrovsky
has described being at Kibbutz Be’eri days after the Hamas onslaught.)“I
never thought I would see this in Australia. Not in my lifetime… On
Bondi Beach, of all places, this iconic place.”“I got hit in the head,
I’m bleeding, I’ve lost blood,” he says. “There are people around me who
are far worse.”Asked about his family, he says: “My children, my wife
is safe, thank God. They’re okay. They managed to get away. But I didn’t
know where they were. There’s no greater fear, no greater horror,
[than] not knowing where your family is. They’re okay. I’ll be okay.”
Hero who disarmed Sydney Hanukkah event terrorist named as passerby Ahmed al Ahmed-DEC 14,25
A
bystander who tackled and disarmed a gunman during a terror attack on a
Hanukkah event in Sydney is named as Ahmed al Ahmed.Dramatic footage
showed the 43-year-old fruit store owner wrestling the weapon from one
of the two gunmen.His cousin tells 7News that the father of two was shot
twice.“He’s in hospital and we don’t know exactly what’s going on
inside,” says the man named only as Mustafa. “We do hope he will be
fine. He’s a hero 100 percent.”Earlier, Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu referred to the act of bravery as “the pinnacle of Jewish
heroism.”
After Bondi Beach terror attack, public Hanukkah lightings set to go ahead in UK, France, South Africa-By Zev Stub-DEC 14,25
Public
Hanukkah candle-lightings in most Jewish communities will go ahead as
planned, despite increased fears in the wake of the terror attack at a
Hanukkah party at Bondi Beach near Sydney, in which at least 11 people
were killed.All events in France will proceed as scheduled with
additional security by police, Yonathan Arfi, president of the CRIF,
which represents Jewish institutions in France, tells The Times of
Israel.In the UK, all events will go ahead as scheduled, with the
understanding that things could change if necessary, says The Board of
Deputies of British Jews.Hanukkah events in South Africa will likewise
proceed with additional security, a representative of that community
says.Chabad events around the world will continue as planned, a
spokesman for the movement says.“It’s moments like these that we need
more light, more energy, more confidence,” the spokesman says. “We need
to stand strong and tall. That’s the call to action that Rabbi Eli
Schlanger, the Chabad rabbi murdered in today’s attack, lived by.”
Suspect in Bondi Beach Hanukkah terror attack named; police said to be raiding his home-DEC 14,25
A
suspect in the deadly terror shooting at a Hanukkah event in Sydney’s
Bondi Beach has been identified as Naveed Akram, an unnamed senior law
enforcement official tells Australia’s ABC News.The official says that a
raid is underway at Akram’s Sydney home.Police have said that one of
the two gunmen was shot and killed at the scene, while the second was
critically injured. ABC News says it is unclear which is Akram.
Germany
foils suspected Islamist car ramming plot targeting Christmas
market-Authorities detain an Egyptian, three Moroccans and a Syrian over
alleged plan to carry out attack in Bavaria with intent to kill ‘as
many people as possible’By AFP Today, 8:05 am-DEC 14,25
BERLIN,
Germany — German authorities said Saturday they had arrested five men on
suspicion of involvement in an Islamist plot to plow a vehicle into
people at a Christmas market.Officials have been on high alert during
the festive season, after a deadly car-ramming attack at a market in the
city of Magdeburg last Christmas shocked the nation.Police and
prosecutors said they had detained an Egyptian, three Moroccans, and a
Syrian on Friday over the plan to carry out the attack in the southern
Bavaria state.Investigators suspect “an Islamist motive” for the plot,
according to the statement.The Egyptian, aged 56, was an imam at a
mosque in the Dingolfing-Landau district, German newspaper Bild
reported.According to authorities, he had called for an attack to be
carried out on a Christmas market in the area “using a vehicle in order
to kill or injure as many people as possible.”The Moroccans — aged 30,
28, and 22 — are alleged to have then agreed to carry out the attack
while the Syrian, 37, encouraged them.All the suspects were brought
before a magistrate on Saturday after their arrest and are in
custody.Joachim Herrmann, state interior minister in Bavaria, told Bild
the “excellent cooperation between our security services” had helped to
prevent “a potentially Islamist-motivated attack.”Authorities did not
say where the suspects were arrested.It was also not clear when the
attack was supposed to take place, how detailed the plans were, and
which market was to be targeted.Rising security costs-Last year’s attack
in Magdeburg, which saw a car barrel through a crowded market, killed
six people and wounded more than 300.A Saudi doctor — who is a critic of
Islam and an adherent of far-right views and radical conspiracy
theories — went on trial last month, accused of carrying out the
rampage.Taleb Jawad al-Abdulmohsen, a 51-year-old psychiatrist, has
admitted to plowing a rented SUV through the market.In 2016, an Islamist
drove a truck into a crowd at a Christmas market in Berlin, killing 12
people.The rampages have fueled a heated debate about the security of
the festive installations, which are hosted by nearly every town and
consist of stalls with merchants selling gifts, hot mulled wine,
sausages, and sweets.Some cities have cancelled the beloved winter
tradition because of the mounting costs and complexity of ensuring
security.Magdeburg’s Christmas market went ahead this year but only
received approval shortly before opening.