3611 NewsThe Herald's Voice

The lynch mob against Jews is back

olivetreevidev.wpenginepoweredFriday, May 22, 2026Psalm 83:4
The lynch mob against Jews is back

A pro-October 7th massacre conference in Toronto, hosted by a designated terrorist organization, signals a brazen resurgence of antisemitism in the West, reflecting the moral decline that Scripture warns precedes judgment.

Primary Scripture

Psalm 83:4

Direct Principle
They say, "Come, let us wipe them out as a nation; let the name of Israel be remembered no more!"

Why this passage

Psalm 83 is a communal lament in which the psalmist lists a coalition of nations conspiring to destroy Israel. The verse captures the explicit genocidal intent of these enemies: to erase Israel's national existence and memory.

The plain sense is a prayer against those who openly plot Israel's annihilation. This principle—that nations and groups conspire to destroy Israel—is a recurring pattern in Scripture, not limited to any single historical fulfillment.

What This Means for Your Faith
By the Sword of GabrielEditorial Voice · 3611 News

Psalm 83:4 declares of Israel's enemies: "Come, let us wipe them out as a nation; let the name of Israel be remembered no more." This ancient cry echoes in the modern celebration of the October 7th massacre, where hatred of Jews is not hidden but paraded in public conferences.

Such open contempt for God's covenant people is a sign of deep moral rot, a society that calls evil good. Yet the Lord sees and will not be mocked; He who keeps Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps.

Today's Prayer

Pray that the Lord would expose and thwart this conference, protect the Jewish community in Toronto, and awaken Canadian authorities to the gravity of allowing terrorist-linked celebrations of mass murder.

Further Scripture

Additional passages that illuminate this event, each grounded in a distinct interpretive lens.

Isaiah 5:20Direct Principle
Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter!

Why this passage

Isaiah 5 pronounces a series of 'woes' against Judah's moral inversion. The prophet condemns those who reverse God's moral order—calling what He calls evil 'good' and what He calls good 'evil.' This is a direct principle of divine judgment against a society that has lost its moral compass.

The original context was Israel's own apostasy, but the principle applies universally: any society that celebrates murder and calls it justice invites God's woe.

How it applies

A conference that celebrates the October 7th massacre—the brutal murder of over a thousand Israelis, including women and children—as a 'Palestinian revolutionary path' is a textbook case of calling evil good. That this event is hosted in Canada, a nation that once stood against terrorism, marks a profound moral decline that Scripture explicitly condemns.

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