Friday, May 22, 2026

NASCAR driver Kyle Busch. Dead at 41 unexpectantly.


Kyle Busch, now a true NASCAR legend.

For many men, sports is a way to be competitive, to be in a team with others striving for victory, to challenge yourself and others to reach the top.

I am a NASCAR(auto racing) fan. I have been since 1994 when I went to my first race in Charlotte, North Carolina. Jeff Gordon, #24 driver for Hendricks Motor Sports, was my man.

I also liked Kyle Busch. Yes, he was sassy and all, and disliked by many, but he pushed himself and others competitively to win. And he did 63 times in the top tier alone, in addition to the next level and truck series (having the most wins all-time.)

When he married his wife Samantha, and together raised two kids )son 11 and daughter 4) he matured. No longer the “brat” but more level-headed. And yet he still had that drive to win.

On May 21, 2026, he died at the age of 41 unexpectedly in a hospital, from an illness yet publicized.

I hope Kyle knew the Lord Jesus. I hope to see him in heaven. I hope others will consider where they are at in life, for we never know when this life is over.

Ahava and shalom,

Steve Martin





Back to Jerusalem. And then the New Jerusalem.

Back to Jerusalem. And then the New Jerusalem.


Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Men - stand with the IDF


Standing with the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) is the right stand to take.

Walk on. Complete your destiny and leave a legacy.


Walk On. Fulfill Your Destiny and Leave a Legacy

 

As I looked at the early morning stars, at least in my hemisphere at that hour, the Spirit of the Lord gave me some inspiration.

I had noticed an image on Facebook of a t-shirt bearing the image of an old(er) man walking onward, with the saying, “Never underestimate a man traveling on in his seventies.”

Simple things like this are used by the Lord in my life to let His gifts flow. And so, from that t-shirt image it resulted in the one included with this message. A man walking on a stone trail towards Jerusalem, pulling a cart with his books. (Which happen to be mine!) Yeah, Lord!

Each of us has been called, given gifts, and asked to take His love to our generation.

Every niche, every facet of life, needs to be touched by the love of Jesus Christ.

We have been saved to fulfill His destiny He has for us, and leave a legacy for the next generation(s) to know and follow.

Be blessed as you too seek Him today. Find and know your destiny. Walk in it. Leave a legacy that glorifies our Lord Jesus.

“We proclaim Him, admonishing every man and teaching every man with all wisdom, so that we may present every man complete in Christ.” Colossians 1:28, NASB

 

Ahava and shalom,

Steve Martin



Walk on. Complete your destiny and leave a legacy.

Steve Martin in Charlotte, North Carolina



Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The historical origins of Christian Zionism - Susan Michal, All Israel News

 

The historical origins of Christian Zionism



Christian Zionism has become a frequent topic in recent news, especially as media figures like Tucker Carlson and Nick Fuentes criticize those who affirm Israel’s God-given right to the land—a promise made to the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in Genesis 12:1–3, 7.

However, Christian Zionism is not a modern invention. While the term is relatively new, its roots stretch back centuries—in fact, as far back as the early church.

Just as Jesus and the disciples were Jewish, so were almost all the New Testament authors, as was the early church they wrote about. As a result of their deep understanding of the Hebrew Scriptures, these authors believed in the everlasting validity of the Abrahamic covenant. They also believed in the literal accuracy of the prophecies regarding the life and ministry of Jesus as well as those about future events, including the restoration of a kingdom to Israel.

In the first century, church fathers still held to the theological expectation of a restored nation of Israel. Dr. Tricia Miller, director of CAMERA’s Partnership of Christians and Jews, writes:

The expectation of a future return of the Jewish people to the land and the restoration of the nation of Israel was also fairly common in the early church. Tertullian, a third-century leader, said: “It will be fitting for the Christian to rejoice, and not to grieve, at the restoration of Israel, if it be true, as it is, that the whole of our hope is intimately united with the remaining expectation of Israel.”[1]

As the church grew over time, it became predominantly Gentile. Christians—from pagan backgrounds with little knowledge of the Hebrew Scriptures—lost sight of the Jewish roots of their faith and God’s promises to the Jewish people. Most did not even know that Jesus was Jewish.

The Council of Nicaea

The Council of Nicaea of AD 325 was a turning point in that separation. This Council was monumental in affirming the divine nature of Jesus, articulated most clearly in what became known as the Nicene Creed. In his article “Healing the Rift: 1700 Years After the Nicaea Council,” ICEJ President Dr. Juergen Buehler states: “While the creed and the 20 canons that emerged from Nicaea were free of anti-Jewish rhetoric, the official letters [to distribute the creed to churches throughout the world] from Emperor Constantine contained a critical and condescending attitude toward the Jews.”[2] This tone spread throughout the church, resulting in anti-Jewish preaching by some of the most notable church fathers.

Nicaea to the Reformation

For well over 1,000 years, most of the church believed that Christians had replaced the Jews as the people of God’s covenant. Known as Replacement Theology, this interpretive framework reads the Scriptures allegorically. God’s promises to the Jewish people are spiritualized and applied to the church. In rare instances, monks and priests read the Scriptures differently; however, in the church’s first thousand years, this view remained predominant and became the fuel that fed centuries of Christian antisemitism.

The Reformation

This began to change in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries when the Bible was translated into the languages of the common people, including into English. Christians began reading Scripture for themselves. They learned about Christianity’s Jewish roots and the promised return of the Jews to their ancient homeland.

As a result, respected theologians and preachers taught of a future Jewish restoration to the land of Israel. Entire movements of Christians began praying for this return. By the eighteenth century, the Restorationist movement had blossomed and included many theologians, writers, and politicians. This movement continued to grow in the nineteenth century; the term “Christian Zionist” was first used by Theodore Herzl, who acknowledged the participation of some key Christian supporters at the first Zionist Congress in 1897. Christian leaders had expanded their involvement in the Zionist cause beyond prayer to advocacy. They did all that they could to help the Jewish people return to Israel.

Christian Zionists today are proud to follow in the footsteps of a multitude of Bible-believers from numerous theological persuasions, countries, and professions—men and women who saw overwhelming evidence in Scripture for God’s continuing covenant with the Jewish people and their right to their ancient homeland. While many Christian Zionists today may differ with these pioneers on other points of theology or politics, they all agree on the biblical significance of the restoration of Israel.

Conclusion

From the early church fathers through the Reformation and beyond, a faithful remnant of believers has stood firm in their conviction that God’s covenant with the Jewish people—His promise to be an everlasting people and a blessing to the world in a specific land—remains unbroken. And though Replacement Theology caused a centuries-long schism between the church and synagogue, the modern shift away from it has enabled the church to rediscover its Jewish roots and recognize Israel’s restoration—both physical (to the land) and a future spiritual restoration.

Clearly, Christian support for the Jewish people did not originate in 1948 with the birth of the State of Israel. Instead, deep-rooted biblical conviction is the driving force behind the Zionist vision. 

[1] Tricia Miller, PhD, CAMERA, “No Tucker, Christian Zionism is NOT Christian Heresy! Israel 365 News, November 5, 2025.

Dr. Susan Michael is the U.S.A. Director of the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem, Director of the American Christian Leaders for Israel network and creator of the Israel Answers website. She is the author of Encounter the 3D Bible and hundreds of articles located on her blog.

Press On by Steve Martin


​PRESS ON

Looking at that covered wagon, a prairie schooner, in the small Waxhaw, North Carolina museum got me to thinking about what character those people had to have. As I leaned over the side, on my toes to see high enough, I became in awe of their grit, courage, and fortitude.

They had little in regards to physical means. And yet they pressed on with their imbedded character.

Entire families, moving with what they owned and could fit in that space, set out for a more hopeful future.

According to Gemini, “a classic Western covered wagon, known as a Prairie Schooner, featured a wooden box that was about 4 feet wide and 9 to 11 feet long. With the canvas cover attached, the wagon stood about 10 feet tall and spanned 23 feet in total length including the animal yoke and tongue.

Not much. But they did what they had to do, with what they had.

We got it made with our cushioned seats, power steering, more horse power than we need A/C vehicles, which can drive hundreds of miles in a single day.

We need more of their “press on” attitude in our comfortable lives. To be able to see ahead, commit to getting it done, and believing the good Lord will bless the work of our hands is needed more today than even then.

“Brethren, I do not regard myself as having laid hold of it yet; but one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and reaching forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.” Philippians 3:13, NASB

I hope you are too. Press on!

Ahava and shalom,

Steve Martin


Monday, May 18, 2026

You Have To Fight by Steve Martin

You Have To Fight

Living the Christian life, as men of God, will require you to fight. We are in a constant spiritual battle. They enemy will not give up until he is thrown into his eternal damnation location as promised in the Bible.

We need to fight for our nation, our families, our communities, the nation of Israel, and our own spiritual lives.

Our enemy, the fallen angel who wanted to be the one worshiped and praised, is continually warring against the saints of our Creator. He is relentless.

“Be of sober spirit, be on the alert. Your adversary, the devil, prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour.” 1 Peter 5:8, NASB

Men should be accustomed to war. In the natural, it has mostly been the men who have gone out, leaving home and family, to wage war against those who had sought to take over, destroy, and kill off other countries. It has cost million of lives on both sides.

But as in the natural, we must fight in the spiritual, using the weapons we have been given.

With prayer (I especially use my spiritual prayer tongue daily), the Lord’s written Word, gathering with other believers – these are needed to combat the enemy in the unseen world.

We must not think we can sit on the sidelines and casually watch. We must engage the enemy to win the battle. Not just on defense, but we must go on the offense too.

“The horse is prepared for the day of battle, But victory belongs to the Lord.” Proverbs 21:31, NASB

I am most thankful for the faithful women who have been prayer warriors.

Men, we need to step up our game!

Ahava and shalom,

Steve Martin