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Israel

Located on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea, Israel is the only Jewish-majority state in the world. It has a total land area of 22,072 sq km with an estimated population of approximately 7.7 million as of 2010.

6,421 Questions

What was King Ahab's impact on Israel?

AnswerKing Ahab ruled Israel from 873-852 BCE.

The Old Testament Book of Kings downplays the positive side of his reign and emphasises his marriage to the Phoenician princess Jezebel, whom it criticises strenuously.

The Book of Kings attributes a great expansion of Israelite territory to King David, during the century before the time of Ahab, leaving Ahab as merely a moderately successful military leader. Modern archaeologists are being forced to re-evaluate this, and see Ahab and his father, Omri, as the great military leaders who oversaw the expansion of Israelite territory, not David.

When archaeologists were excavating Megiddo, they found buildings that looked like magnificent stables. Of course, they at first attributed them to King Solomon who - the Bible explains - owned a lot of horses and chariots. The new view is that they probably belonged to King Ahab. For this theory there is extra-Biblical evidence from Israel's traditional enemy, Assyria. In 853, King Shalmaneser led a major invasion force against Syria, Phoenicia and Israel. A coalition of nations met him near Qarqar in western Syria. Apparently Shalmaneser won because he claimed victory and erected a monument known as the Monolith Inscription in which he gloats how he triumphed over all the armies arrayed against him, including "Ahab the Israelite" with 2,000 chariots and 10,000 foot soldiers.

What is the connection of Jacob to Israel?

Israel was the new name given to Jacob after he wrestled with the angel. 'Israel' means one who prevails with God.

The nation of Israel was named after him. The twelve tribes of Israel are descendants of his twelve sons.

Are people not hating Israel for destroying the peace with oil rich Muslim countries and to pay more for gas in USA?

Answer 1

No its because they're jewish.

Answer 2

Yes. Correct, people do not hate Israel for "destroying the peace" with oil-rich Muslim countries and for inflating oil prices. This is because most people are aware that Israel is not actually the cause of the problems cited or because people are aware that those problems do not actually exist.

First, there was no peace in the Middle East before Israel. The Saudi Wars existed in the 1920s. There was the Iranian Revolution of 1925 which saw the Pahlavi come to power. There were the Circassian and Armenian genocides of the late 1800s and 1910s respectively. There were several pogroms of Jews in the Ottoman Levant in the 1800s and early 1900s. Additionally, since Israel's independence, the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict is responsible for less than 5% of Middle Eastern War deaths. Far more brutal have been the three Persian Gulf Wars, the Lebanese Civil War, Black September in Jordan, the three Yemeni Civil Wars, and the Anfal Campaign (Kurdish Genocide) in Iraq.

Second, as to gas prices. the regular American is paying more for gas due to the War in Iraq and the decisions of OPEC concerning how much petroleum to produce. There is also pressure from India and China who are increasing consumption and driving up the price.

Will all nations turn against Israel?

no.

No? All nations are already turning against Israel. The United States is now joining those nations.

See these two articles:

http://townhall.com/columnists/DianaWest/2010/03/25/a_sudden_turn_against_israel

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article7076431.ece

If you are curious to see what the Bible has to say on this subject, read the last few chapters of Zechariah.

Please note that the question requires a prophecy. Anyone answering it is speculating and cannot hold it to be true until it happens - unless they have a crystal ball.

What does Israel transliterate into?

The correct transliteration of the Hebrew word is 'Yisroel'. Israel is the anglicised version of the Hebrew.

What similarities and differences exist between the Israelis and the Palestinians on the issues of the Holocaust?

There are no "issues of the Holocaust". The Holocaust was an event that took six years in Europe (1939-1945) where the Nazi German government and its collaborators primarily targetted the Jewish population in the territories they occuppied for extermination, but also murdered nearly as many Non-Jews, for a total of 11 million dead (6 million Jews and 5 million Non-Jews).

Unfortunately, most Palestinians (like most other Arabs) are either (1) ignorant of the Holocaust, (2) believe incorrectly that the number of dead in the Holocaust is orders of magnitude smaller (100,000 or so), or (3) believe that the State of Israel was awarded to the Jews as recompense for the Holocaust - forcing the Arabs to "pick up the tab" for Europe's mistake. With regards to (1), the Arab media and the leaders of the Arab World intentionally ignore or mute discussion of the Holocaust and can be directly faulted for the mass ignorance of their people. With regards to (2), willful denial is a serious issue that plagues the Arab World and should be combatted with education (which requires (1) to be ameliorated.

With regards to (3), this is a much thornier issue, because many of the nations at the United Nations who approved UNGA Resolution 181 (II) did so in response to the Holocaust. It jolted them to the reality of the violence in Anti-Semitism. However, those votes did not create Israel; the Jewish Community of Palestine (the Yishuv) was already well-established before the Holocaust in 1939 and the Zionist movement existed all the way to the 1890s. The momentum to create a Jewish State was already beginning in the 1920s with the San Remo Conference of 1920 and the Declaration of the British Mandate for Palestine in 1922. The Holocaust was a tragedy in Jewish history but its occurrence played no role in the Jews' wishing to live in the State of Israel nor their creation of the state.

Who did israel capture the Gaza strip from and when?

Since 1948 to 1967 Gaza strip was occupied by Egypt and Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem ( what some people out of ignorance call "West bank") were occupied by Jordan. In 20 years neither Egypt nor Jordan moved a finger to create any "palestinian State", and what is curious: it did not even occur to Arabs who lived in Gaza , Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem to demand it.

In 1967 Arabs attacked Israel again. In six days Israel totally defeated the armies of Egypt, Syria and Jordan( that is why this war is often referred to as the Six-Day war) - and liberated the historical Jewish land of Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem. As Egypt refused to accept the responsibility for Gaza, Israel had to figure as the Occupying Power, although Israel from the start offered Gaza to Egypt. This situation continued until 2005, when Israel in a unilateral move withdrew from Gaza.

Since then, there is not a single Israeli citizen there, neither military nor civilian.

Gaza is ruled by the Islamic terrorist group called Hamas that since 2006 to 2009 were continuously launching rockets and mortar shells on the cities situated in the South of Israel. The total number of rockets launched by Hamas terrorists from Gaza on Israeli civilians since 2006 to 2009 exceeded 6,000, which made Israel first establish the naval blockade of Gaza and then launch the anti-terrorist operation "Cast lead". In the course of the anti-terrorist operation, Hamas suffered a heavy blow an until 2011 was relatively quiet. However, in 2011, with Iran´s support, Hamas re-armed and prepared for the second round. The attacks on Israeli cities from Gaza resumed and intensified and in 2012 Israel launched another anti-terrorist operation against Hamas called "Pillar of Cloud". After getting another heavy blow, Hamas asked for the Armistice, and now both sides keep it.

How long would it take to get to the holy land to England in 1290?

Whether by land or by sea, months. Your only choices for overland

transportation were: Ride on an animal, ride in a wagon pulled by an

animal, or walk.

What were the results of the Israel-PLO Conflict?

Thousands dead and the Oslo Accords of 1993, granting the PLO the authority to form the Palestinian Authority and negotiate with Israel over the future of the Palestinian people.

What was area of Israel in 1950?

20,770 kilometers square or 8,019 miles square.

What is the difference between Israel and Mesopotamia?

Though both are in the Middle East, they are two different regions. Israel borders the Mediterranean Sea, while Mesopotamia is the area between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers (present-day Iraq).

What conflict caused Israel to split into two kingdoms?

Rehoboam's father, King Solomon, had levied relatively heavy taxes, which had been used for such large-scale endeavors as building the First Temple. The fact that the nation was so prosperous and happy in his time (1 Kings 4:20) demonstrates that Solomon conducted his governance in a praiseworthy manner.
After Solomon's death, the people approached his son Rehav'am (Rehoboam) and asked that he now lower the tax. He ignored the counsel of his elder advisers and refused the people's request. This led the Ten Tribes to turn away from him (1 Kings ch.12).
The background reason was because King Solomon had been less than perfectly righteous. This led God to punish him by diminishing his dynasty in the lifetime of his son (Rehoboam). 1 Kings ch.11. A deeper reason is that God wanted the more righteous people of Judah to be influenced by the Ten Tribes as little as possible.
Centuries later, by 738 B.C.E., both kingdoms faced new threats to their independence from the Assyrians. The Assyrians forced Israel and Judah to pay tribute. In 722 B.C.E., Assyria invaded Israel, whose army was weak, and conquered it. The kingdom of Israel ended. Around 612 B.C.E., the Assyrian Empire fell to the Babylonians.
For many years, King Nebuchadnezzar ruled Babylonia. In 586 B.C.E., Nebuchadnezzar captured Jerusalem. When Judah's leaders resisted his rule, the Babylonians destroyed the Temple in Jerusalem. They took hundreds of thousands of Jews to Babylon, some as slaves.

Do Israeli people have blood-type O?

Not all Israelis are blood-type O, but there are certainly some who are.

What Arab countries are the most democratic?

If current Tunisia continues to behave the way it did in the previous election by the time the next election comes, the Arab World will have added "Modern Functional Democracy" to its list of various regime types. However, up to the present day there are no Arab States that are Liberal Democracies.

There are numerous Illiberal Democracies in the Arab World, though. In those cases, the Arab Nations were Liberal Democracies on paper with guaranteed voting rights, freedoms of speech and religion, constitutions that bind the authority of the Executive. However, in nearly every Arab regime that this describes (like Saddam Hussein's Iraq, Mubarak's Egypt, ben Ali's Tunisia) these paper rights and limitations did not exist. These rulers used an apparent mechanism of democracy to perpetuate a dictatorship.

Should US invade Israel?

No. The United States has invaded enough countries in recent memory. It does not need to launch a war against a regional ally.

In first century Israel what were Vessels of Honor and Vessels of Dishonor?

NOTE on the QUESTION...

These phrases are used symbolically in the Bible (Romans 9 and 2 Timothy 2); but I'm wondering what the metaphors were actually rooted in. Were there actually such vessels in ancient homes and what was their literal usage?

The Greek phrases used are, "σκεῦος εἰς τιμή" (vessel for honor) and "σκεῦος εἰς ἀτιμία" (vessel for disonor).

Edited Side Note:

This is in regard to mentioned scripture Romans 9 and the honor system of the first century.

In the first century honor was foundational to the society. Children were raised to seek honor and avoid disgrace, and this honor would come from the pronouncement of a person's worth by his peers. It was actually common and quite acceptable for men to boast about their deeds, which if accurate would bring them more honor. (But if inaccurate would simply make them look like a fool) As for Romans 9, verse 21 it was referring to mankind as the vessel, and God as the potter. In this chapter Paul was talking to the church in Rome about God's power over our lives and how He makes us how He wishes. (He gives the example with pharaoh) A question is returned about the justice behind our free-will and His judgment and Paul uses the example with the potter and the clay. The clay has no right to tell the potter how or what to make it into, implying the same how we have no right to tell God how He should make us. Thus he says God can make some "vessels" (men/women) for honor, while others for dishonor depending on His will.