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With Michael Walker
With Michael Walker

A message to The World……

To argue the existence of God without invoking doctrine, emotion, or fear-based theology is to aim directly for the unexplainable, the unreplicable, and the undeniable. The answer lies not merely in philosophical debate or biological complexity, but in the living, breathing timeline of a nation that was scattered into the wind and yet rose again to claim its exact ancestral land. The modern state of Israel is not simply a country—it is a divine footprint on the soil of human history, a miracle etched in borders, language, prophecy, and permanence. This deep dive does not aim to inspire belief. It aims to leave no excuse.
The proof begins in Deuteronomy 4:32–39, where Moses—prophet, leader, and mouthpiece of Yahwey—stands before the newly liberated Israelites on the cusp of the Promised Land. His words are not hopeful predictions. They are historical proclamations. He challenges the people to look across all creation and ask: has any nation ever heard the voice of God from the fire and lived? Has any deity ever delivered a people from another nation by signs, wonders, plagues, war, and an outstretched arm? Moses testifies not to belief but to experience. Yahwey had manifested Himself audibly, visually, and physically. He had scorched the sky with plagues in Egypt, parted seas, descended in fire on Mount Sinai, and spoken audibly to a gathered people—not to a mystic, not to a prophet in secret, but to an entire nation. Deuteronomy 4 is a recorded challenge to all of history: has anything like this ever happened? The answer remains unchanged after 3,000 years—no.
But what Moses does next is what turns this speech from reflection into prophecy. In Deuteronomy 30, he tells the people that after all the blessings and curses have come upon them—after rebellion, dispersion, and suffering—Yahwey would not abandon them. When they remember, repent, and return, He would gather them again from all nations and restore them to the land He gave their ancestors. This is not poetic. It is predictive. Moses outlines a future cycle of rebellion, exile, and divine regathering long before it occurs. And history confirms this cycle in stunning detail.
Israel disobeyed. They were conquered by Babylon, Persia, Greece, and Rome. In 70 AD, the Second Temple was destroyed, and the Romans scattered the Jewish people across the known world. For nearly 2,000 years, Israel ceased to exist on any map. Its people were hunted, marginalized, assimilated, and exiled from every corner of the earth—from Spain to Germany to Ethiopia and beyond. Yet somehow, the Jews retained their identity, their language, their culture, and their memory of Zion. No other ethnic group in history has survived two millennia without a homeland. No civilization, not even the greatest empires, has ever resurfaced after complete dissolution. But Israel did.
Then came 1948. After the trauma of the Holocaust, with no political precedent, no military power, and no support from surrounding Arab nations, the Jews returned. They declared statehood on the same ancestral land that Moses spoke of, using the same Hebrew language, reclaiming the same capital, and reviving a nation that had been dead for nearly two thousand years. This was not poetic symbolism. This was literal fulfillment. Deuteronomy 30 did not speak in metaphors. Yahwey had promised that He would bring His people back from the ends of the earth—and He did. Isaiah 43:6 foresaw it clearly: “Bring My sons from afar and My daughters from the ends of the earth.” And Isaiah 43:10-11 made the implications plain: “You are My witnesses… that you may know and believe Me and understand that I am He. Before Me there was no God formed, and there will be none after Me.” Israel’s existence is not just proof that God saves. It is proof that God speaks.
This singular event—the resurrection of a nation—is more than geopolitical coincidence. It is statistically and historically impossible. Author Carl Gallups captures the absurdity of it through analogy: imagine if every American were conquered, scattered, and integrated across the globe. Then imagine their descendants, after 2,500 years, returning to the shores of America and restoring the Constitution, borders, government, culture, military, and currency in full. Such a scenario is beyond imagination. It has never happened to any other people, ever. And yet it happened with Israel. And it was foretold millennia before it occurred.
The implications are not emotional. They are existential. For those who seek proof of God—not belief, but proof—one need only look at the living testimony of Israel. If Moses had made a vague spiritual claim, skeptics could dismiss it. But he made a verifiable, measurable prediction: that the Jews would be scattered and then regathered in the same land. And the only entity with the power to orchestrate such a global resurrection is not government, not man, not luck—but God. The kind of God who says, “I am the Lord, and there is no savior besides Me.”
Furthermore, the timing and language of the prophecy matter. Moses was not describing a metaphorical return or a temporary revival. He declared that Yahwey Himself would do it: “The Lord your God will bring you into the land which your fathers possessed, and you shall possess it.” That prophecy was not merely fulfilled—it was fulfilled after every possible natural obstacle made its fulfillment impossible. The land had been overtaken by countless empires. The people had no army, no capital, no flag. Yet the very words Moses spoke were set into motion because they came from the One who controls time itself.
This proof is airtight because it’s not based on personal experience, philosophical debate, or unverifiable supernatural claims. It’s based on public, historical, geopolitical, and linguistic realities that align perfectly with ancient prophetic texts written thousands of years in advance. This is not “because the Bible says so”—this is “because the world watched it happen.”
Even the most secular historians must concede the unique nature of Israel’s revival. But history alone does not explain it. History records it. Scripture explains it. Israel’s return is not just a Jewish miracle—it is humanity’s undeniable encounter with a covenant-keeping God. A God who declared His intentions, allowed the world to test Him, and then delivered exactly as He promised. No other deity in recorded religion has ever made such a verifiable claim and fulfilled it with this level of precision and permanence. None even attempt it. Because only one is real.
So is God real?
Ask the one nation who heard His voice and lived. Ask the one people who were scattered for two thousand years and returned. Ask the covenant that was broken a thousand times but still restored. Ask the land that would not release its inheritance to any other empire. Ask the heavens that still declare the glory of the one who said, “You are My witnesses.”
The answer is not found in belief. The answer is found in the ashes of Babylon, the ruins of Rome, the silence of every fallen empire—and the unfading banner of Israel.
God is real.
And Israel proves it.
Amen.