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Israel Study Tour - Campus Ministry @ GVSU

May 2-16, 2015

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The significance of the call

To start our first day in the Holy Land we explored the Negev Desert. First, we headed out to the ancient remains of Be’er Sheva, where Abraham ended up after God called him out of Ur. We learned about the structure of the ancient city, explored it’s water systems, and heard Biblical stories that took place in that location. Next, we traveled to Mach-tesh-ramon, or the “Super Bowl”. This was essentially an enormous canyon that once contained a great sea; it was far too huge to comprehend the depth and length of this chasm. We had a lesson at the top of a ridge, then hiked to the bottom and had a second lesson. After a quick lunch break, we traveled to Nahal-Zin and hiked through another canyon that housed a beautiful creek, many caves, and a steep and narrow stairway. Tonight we will be staying in the David Spa Hotel right on the dead sea for the next two nights.

Ein Avdat

The Nahal Zin was the southern border of the land of Canaan that was promised to the Israelites. Numbers 34:3-4 (KJV) “Then your south quarter shall be from the wilderness of Zin along by the coast of Edom, and your south border shall be the outmost coast of the salt sea eastward: And your border shall turn from the south to the ascent of Akrabbim, and pass on to Zin: and the going forth thereof shall be from the south to Kadeshbarnea, and shall go on to Hazaraddar, and pass on to Azmon.”

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Allison Hankins:
A few weeks before we left for this beautiful land, everyone on the trip signed up to memorize different chunks of scripture that we would recite in accordance to a lesson or location we visited. I signed up to recite the call of Abram; a very well known piece of scripture. As we were sitting in the shade of the ancient city of Be’er Sheva, the city built by Abraham, I started to recognize the significance of the call that the father of our faith received. In Genesis 12:1-9, God calls Abram to leave his country, his family, and his inheritance. Granted some cultural insight, we learned that the middle-eastern cultures value land in a unique way that differs greatly from a western mind-set. To Abraham, this meant that he had to “give up” his security, his identity, and his future. God was asking him to let go of everything he had; all this without telling him where he was going! Later in Genesis 22, we read about how God asks Abraham to give up his one and only child, Isaac. Once again, God is asking him to give up his future; something humans tend to hold tightly to and try to control. This is a difficult calling. I compare this to myself and my life; does God want control? A total and complete surrendering of my life into His hands? Yes, yes he does. And what should my response be? Abraham models the perfect response to God’s beckoning in Genesis 12:4, “and he went”. He just went. He did exactly what God requested; relinquished control of his security, identity, and future. He trusted God with everything. So now I ask, is there anything that I haven’t trusted God with? Am I willing to walk into the desert wilderness, without GPS, map, or even destination; only with my faith in God’s word? I would hope so. That’s the call we face, the call to surrender and trust.

Beersheba

Beer-Sheva (/bɪərˈʃiːbə/; Hebrew: בְּאֵר שֶׁבַע About this sound Be'er Sheva [beʔeʁˈʃeva]; Arabic: بئر السبع‎‎ About this sound Bi'ir as-Sab [biːr esˈsabeʕ]) is the largest city in the Negev desert of southern Israel. Often referred to as the "Capital of the Negev", it is the center of the fourth most populous metropolitan area in Israel, the eighth most populous city in Israel with a population of 203,604, and the second largest city with a total of 117,500 dunams (after Jerusalem).

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Sarah Veldman:
The last stop today was the wilderness Nahal Zin and the canyon of Ein Avdat. As we walked through the canyon, we experienced what it was like for the Israelites to be in the desert. As I spoke the story of Numbers 20 and Moses striking the rock for water, it was very evident that the Lord is faithful no matter what. Even when the Israelites persisted in grumbling and Moses did not trust in the Lord’s provision, God still provided for His people. Standing in the bottom of Ein Avdat, I felt incredibly small and surrounded by massive amounts of desert that the Lord our God created and cares for. In fact, His eyes are on it from the beginning of the year to the end of the year. The Lord is faithful, for He cannot deny Himself of who He is. He provided for the Israelites in the very desert we stood in today and He continues to provide for me no matter what desert I find myself in.

Ein Avdat

The Nahal Zin is 75 miles (120 km) long and drains 600 sq. miles (1550 sq. km). It is the largest wadi that begins in the Negev. The Nahal Zin was created by reverse erosion as the great height difference between the Negev Highlands and the Jordan Rift caused the underlayers to erode during the rainy season, resulting in the collapse of the harder strata of rock above. The landscape is mostly Eocene limestone, consisting of some brown-black layers of low-grade flint. The flint slows down the erosion of the limestone.

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