8
YOUR EMBASSY IN JERUSALEM / SUPPORTING ISRAEL / EDUCATING THE CHURCH creation itself. When God created plants, animals and mankind, he made them to produce seeds, each after its own kind (Genesis 1:11). The first commandment God gave man was to “be fruitful and multiply” (Genesis 1:28). This means God continually expects his creation to bring forth a harvest. It is literally engraved in the DNA of all created life. Shortly after the flood, God affirmed this eternal principle to Noah. “While the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, winter and summer, and day and night shall not cease” (Genesis 8:22). The principle of seedtime and harvest will endure as long as our planet. There will always T hree times a year the Bible commands the Jewish people to ascend to Jerusalem to celebrate before God. In the spring Israel celebrates Passover followed by Pentecost, while the greatest of all feasts – the Feast of Tabernacles – is observed in the fall. All three pilgrimage feasts are also harvest festivals. Each one celebrates an ingathering of ripened produce from the land. Passover dedicates the first fruits, whereby Israel acknowledged that everything belongs to God. He deserves the first and best part of the harvest. By offering the prime portion, the entire harvest is thereby sanctified before God. Pentecost was traditionally a time of thanksgiving for the spring harvest, primarily the wheat and barley crops. During Sukkot or Tabernacles each fall, the late harvests of grapes and all the fruit of the trees were dedicated to God. This was the greatest feast as it also symbolized the end of the annual harvest cycle before winter arrived. AN ANCIENT LAW The principle of harvest is inherent in INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN EMBASSY JERUSALEM / USA EDITION / MAY 2013 ICEJ NEWSLETTER be seasons of plowing and sowing, followed by seasons of harvest. Yet, a harvest will not just happen without seeds being sown. This is a divine law which rules both the physical (Leviticus 23:10) and spiritual realms (Hosea 10:12). PRINCIPLES OF HARVEST There are certain universal principles which control the dynamic and outcome of the harvest. To understand them will allow us to reap a plentiful harvest, and also protect us from a bad harvest. 1. Principle of Causality Most events in the Bible, as well as in our lives and in nature, do not just happen but are the consequence of prior actions. Without the hard labours of plowing and sowing, a genuine harvest cannot be expected. When it comes to nations, this often meant that the first missionaries sent out into unreached regions sometimes paid with their very lives. The early Church father Tertullian stated: “The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church.” BY JUERGEN BUEHLER For in-depth coverage of other stories in this newsletter, read the new online edition of Word from Jerusalem: www.icejusa.org/wfj CONTINUED on page 7... HARVEST TIME for

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Page 1: ICEJ Newsletter May 2013

YOUR EMBASSY IN JERUSALEM / SUPPORTING ISRAEL / EDUCATING THE CHURCH

creation itself. When God created plants, animals and mankind, he made them to produce seeds, each after its own kind (Genesis 1:11). The first commandment God gave man was to “be fruitful and multiply” (Genesis 1:28). This means God continually expects his creation to bring forth a harvest. It is literally engraved in the DNA of all created life.

Shortly after the flood, God affirmed this eternal principle to Noah. “While the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, winter and summer, and day and night shall not cease” (Genesis 8:22).

The principle of seedtime and harvest will endure as long as our planet. There will always

Three times a year the Bible commands the Jewish people to ascend to Jerusalem to celebrate before God. In the spring Israel celebrates Passover followed by

Pentecost, while the greatest of all feasts – the Feast of Tabernacles – is observed in the fall.

All three pilgrimage feasts are also harvest festivals. Each one celebrates an ingathering of ripened produce from the land. Passover dedicates the first fruits, whereby Israel acknowledged that everything belongs to God. He deserves the first and best part of the harvest. By offering the prime portion, the entire harvest is thereby sanctified before God.

Pentecost was traditionally a time of thanksgiving for the spring harvest, primarily the wheat and barley crops.

During Sukkot or Tabernacles each fall, the late harvests of grapes and all the fruit of the trees were dedicated to God. This was the greatest feast as it also symbolized the end of the annual harvest cycle before winter arrived.

AN ANCIENT LAWThe principle of harvest is inherent in

INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN EMBASSY JERUSALEM / USA EDITION / MAY 2013

ICEJNEWSLETTER

be seasons of plowing and sowing, followed by seasons of harvest.

Yet, a harvest will not just happen without seeds being sown. This is a divine law which rules both the physical (Leviticus 23:10) and spiritual realms (Hosea 10:12).

PRINCIPLES OF HARVESTThere are certain universal principles which

control the dynamic and outcome of the harvest. To understand them will allow us to reap a plentiful harvest, and also protect us from a bad harvest.

1. Principle of Causality Most events in the Bible, as well as in our

lives and in nature, do not just happen but are the consequence of prior actions. Without the hard labours of plowing and sowing, a genuine harvest cannot be expected.

When it comes to nations, this often meant that the first missionaries sent out into unreached regions sometimes paid with their very lives. The early Church father Tertullian stated: “The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church.”

BY JUERGEN BUEHLER

For in-depth coverage of other stories in this

newsletter, read the new online edition of Word from Jerusalem:

www.icejusa.org/wfj

CONTINUED on page 7...

HARVESTTIME for

Page 2: ICEJ Newsletter May 2013

The INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN EMBASSY

JERUSALEM

Please mail all donations to: PO Box 440276

Nashville, TN 37244

T h e I n t e r n a t i o n a l C h r i s t i a n Embassy Jerusalem was founded in 1980 as an act of comfort and solidarity with Israel and the Jewish people in their claim to Jerusalem.

Today, the Christian Embassy stands at the forefront of a growing mainstream movement of Christians worldwide who share a love and concern for Israel and an understanding of the biblical significance of the modern ingathering of the Jews to the land of their forefathers.

From our headquarters in Jerusalem and through our branches and representatives in over 80 nations, we seek to challenge the Church to take up its scriptural responsibilities towards the Jewish people, to remind Israel of the wonderful promises made to her in the Bible, and to be a source of practical assistance to all the people of the Land of Israel.

The ICEJ’s United States Branch is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization with offices in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. We are a non-denominational faith-based ministry supported by the voluntary contributions of our members and friends.

We invite you to join us as we minister

to Israel and the Jewish people worldwide by using the enclosed response slip to make your donation to the ongoing work of the ICEJ.

Or make your tax-deductible gift online:

www.icejusa.org

upcoming icej speaking events

2013 Feast of Tabernacles Tour September 17th - 28th, 2013Experience this year's Feast of Tabernacles Celebration as part of a unique devotional journey to Israel led by Malcolm Hedding.

Cost $3,955 (Includes all flights, hotels etc.) www.icejusa.org/feast

for booking information call: (615) 895-9830

Nashville, TN

Living to Go Church Sunday April 21st: 9.00 & 10.30am

615 Rivergate Pkwy Goodlettsville, TN 37072

Michael Hines

Memphis, TN 'Understanding Israel'

Saturday May 18th: 9am-12.30pm Greater Memphis Pentecostal

Assembly; 8941 E. Shelby Drive Memphis, TN 38125

Daryl Hedding & Michael Hines

Boca Raton, FL

Calvary West Boca Sunday April 28th: 10.00am

West Boca High School, 12811 W. Glades Rd

Michael Hines

Harrisburg, IL 'Understanding Israel'

Saturday June 8th: 9am-12.30pm First General Baptist Church

800 W Sloan St Harrisburg, IL 62946

Daryl Hedding & Michael Hines

With Rev. Malcolm Hedding

April 26th - April 27th , 2013

5201 South Flamingo Road, Cooper City, FL 33330with Paul Wilbur & the Feast of Tabernacles Worship Team

ICEJ Taste of Tabernacles Conference

JUERGEN BUEHLER ICEJ Executive Director

MALCOLM HEDDING Former ICEJ Exec. Director

SUSAN MICHAEL ICEJ-USA Director

MARIO BRAMNICK Pastor, New Wine Ministries

RAY RAMIREZ ICEJ Music Director

Page 3: ICEJ Newsletter May 2013

About three years ago the leadership of the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem received a prophetic word

from the Lord that He would open for us ten new branches in Arab/Muslim nations. Soon after this prophecy, doors of ministry began opening for us in several Muslim-majority countries in North Africa, and soon thereafter in West Africa.

In November last year, we inaugurated a new ICEJ branch in Sierra Leone, which is about 60 percent Muslim and 30 percent Christian. Then, in February of this year, we dedicated two more new branches in Senegal and Niger.

Senegal and Niger are both countries where more than 90 percent of the population is Muslim. The Christian communities in these nations are small minorities of only five percent in Senegal and under half of one percent in Niger. However, the Body of Christ in both of these nations has freedom to preach the Gospel, to plant churches, and to build up their people in the Word of God. The churches there are growing and this was wonderful to

behold during a recent speaking tour which I took through the region.

In addition to these two new ICEJ branches, established during my recent 10-day visit to West Africa, we also had a very powerful new beginning for our ministry in the Ivory Coast, following a long and sad civil war in that nation. ICEJ Executive Director Dr. Juergen Buehler joined us from Jerusalem at this stage of the trip, and together we saw a whole nation open for us once again. It was once more the perfect timing of the Holy Spirit!

It was beautiful to watch as the Lord used our ministry as an instrument to unify the body of Christ, which had been torn apart by the recent civil war in the Ivory Coast that ended last year. All the denominational leaders came together under the headship of Rev. Dr. Jean-Baptiste Nielbien, chairman of the Evangelical churches in the Ivory Coast, and put all their spiritual weight behind our ministry.

Now is the time to come alongside God concerning His purposes for Israel and the nations! Get involved, keep on praying and stand with us financially according to the leading and prompting of the Holy Spirit in your heart. When we pray and work together, the doors will open for our ministry!

GOD IS MOVINGEmbassy opens 4 new branches in West Africa

ICEJ BRANCHES

For more details on upcoming seminars, and conferences or to book an ICEJ teaching event call: (615) 895-9830

WWW.ICEJUSA.ORG/EVENTS

USA DIARY

MAY 2013 / ICEJ EVENTS 3

Jews/ChristiansFEBRUARY 6Rev. Malcolm Hedding, former ICEJ Executive Director, joined Rabbi Shlomo Riskin, Chief Rabbi of Efrat, to discuss “Walking in the Covenants Together” before an audience of 200 Rabbis, Pastors and Christian Leaders in Plantation, Florida.

MARCH 4ICEJ-USA Director, Susan Michael, moderated a panel entitled “Friends of Faith” in order to explain Christian support for Israel to a largely Jewish audience at the annual AIPAC Policy Conference in Washington, DC.

ICEJ SeminarsFEBRUARY 16Susan Michael presented the Understanding Israel seminar in Boca Raton, FL in partnership with Women Impacting the Nation.

FEBRUARY 23Susan Michael and US Outreach Director, Michael Hines, presented a full-day seminar entitled Israel, Islam and Me at 'The Father’s House' in Henderson KY. Pastor Lisa Bourland was appreciative of the ICEJ’s balanced and biblical approach to the complex issues facing Israel and the Church today.

ICEJ on CampusMARCH 26-28Dr. Carrie Burns, ICEJ USA’s Educational Program Developer, spoke 6 times to over 1500 students at La Tourneau University and East Texas Baptist University. Carrie was able to weave the themes of Passover and Easter together with historical anti-Semitism in a unique and inspiring way.

upcoming icej speaking events

"Our God-given vision of connecting the churches with

God’s purposes for Israel went deep into the hearts of

many Christian leaders"

JUERGEN BUEHLER and Juha Ketola meeting with Madame Jeanne Peuh Mond

(center), the special advisor of President Quattara in Abidjan, Ivory Coast.

BY JUHA KETOLA

REV. JUHA KETOLA serves as ICEJ International Director and travels extensively on behalf of the Embassy.

Page 4: ICEJ Newsletter May 2013

“It is a wonderful day. I really like it very much to work together with others to help those who need support,” chimed in ICEJ staff member Pnina Zubarev. “I’m working with Yosef and Shula, who are 70 or 80 years old but they act like young people do!”

“It is always good to go out on these hands-on work days to make a real difference in other peoples’ lives. That is why I came to Israel,” added ICEJ co-worker Matthew Norris.

“As Christians we love to show our support for Israel. To help needy Jewish families celebrate the holiday of Passover with the rest of the nation especially gives me a lot of joy,” said ICEJ AID director Nicole Yoder.

Each year, the Christian Embassy provides traditional Passover baskets to impoverished families all across Israel, including needy new immigrants, single-parent homes, Ethiopian Jews, the elderly and especially Holocaust survivors.

Our efforts are only possible because of the faithful and sacrificial financial support of ordinary people like you. Thank you!

PROJECT UPDATE

As the Passover festival approached in late March, the ICEJ was busy preparing food baskets and other items for distribution to needy

Israeli families in time for this revered Jewish holiday.

On a beautiful spring day, the ICEJ AID team led a group of ten staff members for a busy work day in Haifa stuffing Passover baskets for local residents. The gift boxes contained unleavened matza bread, grape juice, kosher flour and cookies, and many other food supplies that were given to five hundred needy families in northern Israel for their Passover Seder meals.

The packaging was done outside the Haifa Home for Holocaust survivors, and a dozen survivors who live at the ICEJ’s unique assisted-living home joined in the work and fun. The Israeli television network Channel One sent a film crew to cover the unusual interaction between Holocaust survivors and Christian Embassy volunteers for the main national evening news.

“We help needy families for Passover,” explained Yosef, a Holocaust survivor and Haifa Home resident, as he quickly packed food items into boxes.

“We are stacking quite fast but that is fine,” said Shula, another survivor at the home. “We have to do it so everything is ready when the families come to pick up the packages.”

4 ICEJ NEWSLETTER / MAY 2013

GENIA, A HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR at the Haifa Home, being interviewed by Israel's Channel One News.

PASSOVER DELIVEREDB Y B I R T E S C H O L Z

Watch the Israeli TV news report about the ICEJ Passover Project:

www.icejusa.org/preparing-passover

Page 5: ICEJ Newsletter May 2013

Crippled, she came to Israel from Afghanistan with her family by bus, donkey and horse in 1937 when she was a tiny girl. Her mother had fallen

when she was pregnant, so Hannah has been always physically disabled in her legs, and as a result, she has always been told everywhere she goes, “No, you can’t.” Her reply has always been, “Oh yes, I can,” and she is still saying this, despite nearing eighty years old.

Nicole, our ICEJ AID Director, has known Hannah for over a decade. On a hot, August day when Nicole and I were doing visits in the desert south of Jerusalem, she started to smile, telling me of a singular Jewish social worker with whom ICEJ has partnered over the years. She looked over at me and said, “Let’s go see Hannah,” which really meant, “You’re in for a treat.” On our way from Beersheva to Ashkelon, Nicole placed the call to her colleague. I could hear Hannah’s raspy voice on the other end of the line, delighted with the surprise.

Hannah’s caregiver, Susie, a Christian from the Philippines, opened the door to her fifth-floor apartment. Hannah would have done it herself, but these days she is pretty much confined to a chair in her living room. This is only her body. Her spirit is very much unconfined.

Hannah had wanted to serve in the army during the War of Independence (a war in

which her father was killed), but the answer was “No,” because of her physical infirmities. So, she decided to go into social work. Seeing a sign hanging on the outside of a building, she walked in, only to be told by the resident social worker, “No, you are too skinny, eat.” So, she ate. And while she did, she earned her certificate in social work.

In those days there wasn't much work for her, and even the little there was, was unpaid. She set off for Tel Aviv as an unpaid, volunteer social worker, still without any money, then moved on to Petah Tikvah. But Hannah's turning point came in 1959, when her mother gave her bus money, told her to go to Ashkelon and stay put. 53 years later, she's still there.

“Listen,” she told us, “You either let the troubles overcome you, or you overcome troubles.” For all these years and then some, not only has Hannah overcome her troubles, she has been helping others overcome theirs.

We read about her city, Ashkelon, in Judges 14, where the Spirit of the Lord came upon Samson, with power. On the Mediterranean coast, the former Philistine stronghold is now a modern Israeli city with modern problems. Over the years, the ICEJ has partnered with

TRUE GRITFrom Afghanistan to Ashkelon

ICEJ AID

BY CARRIE BURNS

Help ICEJ AID reach out to the needy & disadvantaged in Israel

www.icejusa.org/aid

local social workers, schools and charities to step in and meet many pressing needs, more often or not with Hannah alongside.

For two days each week Hannah has worked in the hospital, for two days at a center for the blind, and in between she helps run a hotline to answer peoples’ questions on where they can go for help. For over half a century, Hannah has served all kinds of people in need such as those with big families, the elderly and poor, the blind and those who need just a little bit of help to make it.

And when Passover and the high holidays are celebrated around the country, Hannah finds the families in Ashkelon who would not have a holiday to celebrate unless ICEJ AID provided their food.

Though officially retired, Hannah just can’t stop working. Nicole welcomes Hannah’s requests to serve the needs of those who call her. And Hannah has made it perfectly clear. “Without Nicole,” she says, “There is no Hannah.”

Nicole and I reluctantly took our leave

to head back to Jerusalem. We said our good-byes, pushed the button for the elevator, looked at each other and discovered that we each had tears in our eyes.

I think our tears meant this: we want to be like her, we want her spunk, her vigorously dedicated heart, her overcoming spirit, and her can-do attitude in spite of disabilities and pain, and, compared to Hannah? We have nothing to complain about. The elevator doors closed and I heard Nicole say, “True Grit.” True grit, indeed.

MAY 2013 / SERVING THE NATION 5

DR. CARRIE BURNS serves as Educational Program Developer for the ICEJ-USA Branch

'CAN-DO' HANNAH (left) telling her remarkable story

to ICEJ-USA Educational Program Developer, Dr. Carrie

Burns in the Israeli coastal city of Ashkelon last summer.

(Photo: Nicole Yoder)

PASSOVER PROVISIONS Some of the thousands of needy Israelis the ICEJ has helped celebrate Passover over the years, many of them thanks to the efforts of Hannah in Ashkelon.

Page 6: ICEJ Newsletter May 2013

EMBASSY HOSTSDR. BILLY WILSONAMONG THE MANY GUESTS AND GROUPS visiting the Embassy headquarters in Jerusalem lately, we were privileged to host Dr. Billy Wilson of Empowered21 in late February for a time of fellowship, ministry and strategy meetings in connection with a major Christian gathering set for Pentecost Sunday in May 2015 here in Jerusalem.

PRESIDENT OF ORAL ROBERTS UNIVERSITYAlready a well-known and respected figure in Evangelical circles, Dr. Wilson was recently appointed as the new president of Oral Roberts University in Tulsa, Oklahoma. While taking on these new duties, he will continue with the Empowered21 movement he has been heading around the globe. The International Christian Embassy Jerusalem is a global board member of Empowered21 and is helping to organise the week-long celebration of Pentecost in May 2015, which is expected to draw some 15,000 Christians to Jerusalem.

6 INSIDE THE EMBASSY / MAY 2013

RECENTLY, the Jewish Agency for Israel presented a certificate of appreciation to A. Howard Flower, director of the ICEJ’s Aliyah Operations, recognizing his dedicated work and the immense contributions of the Christian Embassy towards the return to Israel of tens of thousands of Russian-speaking Jews from the former Soviet Union. The award was delivered at a ceremony in St. Petersburg by the Jewish Agency director for the Northwest region of the Russian Federation.

ICEJ RUSSIAFlower, who also serves as national director for the growing ICEJ-Russia branch, first came to St. Petersburg in 1992 with a vision to help with the mass aliyah then taking place. Before long, he had joined with the ICEJ’s efforts in moving thousands of Russian Jews through Finland to Israel. In the year 2000, he also officially registered our Russian branch. The offices were set up in a building not far from the Jewish Agency and he opened a guest home for Jewish families coming from far away cities in Russia on their way to Israel.

DIRECTOR OF ALYAH OPERATIONSIn 2006, Flower was promoted to director of the ICEJ’s Aliyah Operations and began to expand the work into Belarus and the Baltic countries. He also looked farther West and started ‘fishing’ for Russian-speaking Jews who had moved to Germany, the United States and Canada. When Flower learned of growing Muslim anti-Semitism in Western Europe, the ICEJ also began sponsoring flights for Jews from France and Sweden. More recently, the ICEJ has sponsored flights for Ethiopian Jews and the Bnei Menashe of India. Meanwhile the aliyah work continues in the vast Russian republic, as well as in Latvia, Lithuania and Uzbekistan.

Overall, the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem has helped more than 115,000 Jews come home to Israel since 1989, and Howard Flower has had a direct hand in many of these homecomings.

JEWISH AGENCY HONORS ICEJ ALIYAH DIRECTOR

HOWARD FLOWER and family

Page 7: ICEJ Newsletter May 2013

JEWISH AGENCY HONORS ICEJ ALIYAH DIRECTOR

8 | DECEMBER 2012

This also applies in our personal lives. The vision which God has placed over your life might require times of tilling the ground, sowing and watering. If you feel called to be a teacher, then study the word of God! If you are called to be an evangelist, then learn the work of an evangelist!

2. The amount of seed mattersIf you are looking for a large harvest then do

not sow sparingly. A stingy seed will result in a stingy harvest (2 Corinthians 9:6). Paul writes this in the context of our finances. A sacrificial seed will attract the attention of God (Luke 21:1-3).

At times, sowing requires an act of faith. Isaac decided to sow during a time of a drought and famine. The neighboring farmers might have laughed at this as a ‘waste’ of valuable seed, but God rewarded him with a hundred-fold harvest in the same season (Genesis 26: 1,12).

So, do not let your circumstances dictate to you the type of seed you plant. Rather, put your faith in an Almighty God. This applies to all areas of our lives. If you only read one Bible verse a day and utter a quick prayer before you leave home, then do not expect to become a spiritual giant.

3. The type of seed mattersIt sounds trivial but do not expect a harvest

of wheat from thorns: You reap what you sow! If you sow wind you will reap a storm (Hosea 10:13). If you sow righteousness you will reap mercy (Hosea 10:12). Paul reminds us: “Whatever a man sows, that he will also reap. For he who sows to his flesh will of the flesh reap corruption, but he who sows to the Spirit will of the Spirit reap everlasting life” (Galatians 6:7-8).

4. It all depends on GodFinally, we have to recognize that we can sow

as much as we want, but if we lack the blessing of God we labor in vain. Paul states: “So then neither he who plants is anything, nor he who waters, but God who gives the increase” (1 Corinthians 3:7).

At the end of the day, we are dependant on Him: our relationship with Jesus is the all-determining factor. Jesus says that it is impossible for us to bear fruit on our own. But “he who abides in Me, and I in him, bears much fruit; for without Me you can do nothing” (John 15:5). Therefore, nurture your relationship with Jesus and your harvest will come in due time.

A HARVEST OF SOULSSo we see that much in our personal lives

hinges on the principles of seedtime and harvest. Yet, God also speaks of the harvesting of souls.

Jesus came out of a Samaritan town greatly impacted by his ministry and told his disciples to expect great things from God: “Do you not say,

‘There are still four months and then comes the harvest’? Behold, I say to you, lift up your eyes and look at the fields, for they are already white for harvest!” (John 4:35).

Jesus saw a great harvest taking place in Israel and encouraged his disciples to “lift up your eyes.” Too many people have lost hope for their nation or for the Middle East. Jesus challenges us to lift our sights. The prophet Isaiah declares that which looked barren and dry in Israel will be turned into a fruitful field, and the fruitful field into a forest. What is going to trigger this? The outpouring of God’s Spirit.

THIS YEAR'S FEAST THEME IS "HARVEST"The Bible encourages us to expect a great

end-time harvest of souls all around the world. The prophet Amos foresaw a day, “When the plowman shall overtake the reaper, and the treader of grapes him who sows seed; The mountains shall drip with sweet wine, and all the hills shall flow with it” (Amos 9:13).

This is what is happening in Asia, Africa and Latin America today. It also can happen in your nation. And it can happen in Israel.

I look forward to seeing you at the Feast this September. It is harvest time!

MAY 2013 / TIME FOR HARVEST 7

CONTINUED from page one...

DR. JUERGEN BUEHLER serves as ICEJ Executive Director in Jerusalem. Learn more about attending the 2013 Feast of Tabernacles Celebration in Jerusalem at: www.icejusa.org/feast

Page 8: ICEJ Newsletter May 2013

DON'T JUST VISIT THE LAND OF THE BIBLE, experience the God of the Bible at the annual Christian celebration of the Feast of Tabernacles. Includes a rich 10-day devotional journey through Israel led by Rev. Malcolm Hedding plus 6 nights of anointed worship & teaching in the Judean wilderness and Jerusalem.

FEASTof TABERNACLES

PRESENTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN EMBASSY JERUSALEM

BOOK YOUR SEAT WITH A $100 DEPOSIT TODAY AT: WWW.ICEJUSA.ORG/FEAST

ANGUSBUCHAN

JUERGENBUEHLER

JUHAKETOLA

DANIELKOLENDA

MOSYMADUGBA

RENETERRA NOVA

BILLYWILSON

SUZETTEHATTINGH

H A R V E S T 2 0 - 2 5 S E P T E M B E R 2 0 1 3

FEAST TOUR WITH MALCOLM HEDDINGS E P T E M B E R 1 7 - 2 8 , 2 0 1 3

FULL ISRAEL TOUR • 4 STAR HOTELS • FEAST OF TABERNACLES CELEBRATION• INTERNATIONAL FLIGHTS FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: (615) 895.9830

ICEJ USA / PO BOX 332974 MURFREESBORO, TN 37133 / 615. 895-9830 / WWW.ICEJUSA.ORG