Nehemiah Fund
 

The Nehemiah Fund is an outreach ministry of Ray Bentley Ministries that supports and endorses a group of non-profit organizations dedicated to helping and blessing Israel and her neighbors.

Our desire is to help restore Jews to their homeland and build up Israel by offering tangible assistance, spiritual support, and friendship to all those living in Israel, without regard to cultural or religious heritage.

We believe that we are personally invited by the Lord to “step into the story” of God’s people. Especially when we read verses like Isaiah 49:22: “See, I will beckon to the Gentiles, I will lift up my banner to the peoples; they will bring your sons in their arms and carry your daughters on their shoulders.”

We believe that the Lord has called us to bless Israel and The Nehemiah Fund is our way of fulfilling that important calling.

If you would like to give directly, you can do so through our Maranatha Chapel giving portal:


Your donations directly support these partners:


 
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Friends of Ariel

Ariel, a modern city located in the region of ancient Samaria, has had an ongoing connection with Maranatha Chapel for over a decade. Pastor Ray Bentley and Ron Nachman (former Mayor of Ariel) developed a unique friendship that has allowed the church to build bridges of understanding, friendship, and faith with the people of this community. Because of this relationship, Maranatha Chapel is an American Friend of Ariel and we include this organization as a part of THE NEHEMIAH FUND.

Through American Friends of Ariel, Maranatha helped build Ariel’s state-of-the-art Radio Communications Center, and the National Youth Leadership Development Park. The communications center services the community of Ariel as a remote communications hub broadcasting educational content and also informs the residents of specific procedure in the event of a local or national emergency.

Ron Nachman partnered with Maranatha and other American friends, to build the National Youth Leadership Development Park. There, youth participate in a program which incorporates spiritual disciplines with physical challenges—encouraging them to look to the Scriptures for true leadership values.


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Jewish Agency for Israel

For centuries, God’s chosen people have been scattered throughout the world and have faced persecution and hatred. In 1948, when the State of Israel was established, it opened its doors to all Jewish people—inviting them to settle in the land and offering them immediate citizenship through a relocation process called Aliyah meaning to “ascend.”

The Jewish Agency for Israel (JAFI) has played an important role in helping these Jewish families (more than 3 million people), make the move from Russia, France, Argentina, Ethiopia, Iraq, Germany, Turkey, Yemen, Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Lithuania, and America where they had lived for generations.

The Nehemiah Fund supports JAFI’s immigration programs and is glad to play a part in helping future generations of Jewish people grow in love with their God and The Land.


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Nazareth Baptist School

Since 1949, Nazareth Baptist School (NBS), located in the hometown of Jesus Christ, has been providing a strong Christian presence in an area populated mostly by Muslims and Jews. NBS openly acknowledges its evangelical beliefs and is the only school in Israel that requires attendance in Bible classes and chapel regardless of the student’s background or religion. Because of its national and international reputation for academic excellence, NBS draws students from non-Christian families. Currently more than 20% of its 1000 students [grades K-12] come from Muslim homes.

We support and pray for NBS’s continued evangelical influence on the young people of the community.


Jerusalem Prayer Breakfast

The Jerusalem Prayer Breakfast (JPB) is a prayer movement initiated and chaired by Knesset Member Robert Ilatov, and co-chaired by U.S. Congresswoman Michele Bachmann. Each year the JPB brings together government leaders and influential Christian leaders from all walks of society for a gathering in Israel’s capital city to pray for the peace of Jerusalem. 


One for Israel


Established in 1990, ONE FOR ISRAEL began as a Bible college and has since expanded to a multi-faceted ministry with the express goal of reaching Israelis with the Good News of Yeshua, training and equipping the Body of Messiah in Israel, and blessing our community with Yeshua’s love.

The story and ministry of ONE FOR ISRAEL is part of something much larger – the miraculous restoration of the Jewish people and the miraculous unity between Jewish and Arab believers in Jesus.

We are seeing not only the physical restoration of Israel after a 2000-year exile, but a spiritual revolution is taking place right in front of our eyes. Jewish people are returning to their God and accepting the Messiah in numbers not seen since the early church! Not only that, but many Arab people are coming to the Lord and many Arab believers are finding a deep unity with their Jewish brothers and sisters.

ONE FOR ISRAEL exists to do ministry within this miracle.

We are Jews and Arabs, together serving Messiah Jesus, sharing the Gospel with Israel and the world, making disciples, training leaders, and blessing our communities in the name of Yeshua.


Seven Ways You Can Pray for Israel

 

1. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem

 Psalm 122:6: Pray for the peace of Jerusalem: “May they prosper who love you.” Peace be within your walls...

 Peace in Jerusalem is the key to peace on earth. The turmoil in the Middle East sends waves of unrest and uncertainty to the rest of the world. Jerusalem is the city where God chose to “put His name” (1 Kings 14:21 and several other passages). When we pray for Jerusalem, we connect with the heart of God and seek to be part of what He is doing in our world. When there is true, lasting peace in Jerusalem, there will be peace on earth.

Dear Lord, Prince of Peace, we know that it is only Your healing touch that will heal the land of Your people. We pray that soon we all will see and know You, our Messiah, Savior, and the One who will bring peace to the land.

2. Pray for those who choose Israel as their home, making aliyah, and for those who greet them and help them make a home.

Jeremiah 32:37: Behold, I will gather them out of all countries where I have driven them ... I will bring them back to this place, and I will cause them to dwell safely.

Those who emigrate from their homes to Israel and make aliyah are as varied as the people of the earth. They come from the four corners of the earth: Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. I have had the privilege of greeting groups of immigrants as they land in a completely foreign environment. They are willing to brave life in a completely new world, so drawn are they to their spiritual home. I’ve visited the remarkable “absorption centers” run by the Jewish Agency to provide a soft landing for those who need basic shelter, food, and job and language skills. God has brought His people “back to this place.” The men, women, and children who arrive have expressed their gratitude and even astonishment that so many Gentiles care and want to help. It is our privilege to be a part of what God is doing with His people.

Dear Father, Bless these, your children, who come willingly with anticipation, to the land you promised their people. Help them feel at home and to enjoy the freedom of being Jewish, leaving behind the hurts and persecution of their previous lives. And bless the faithful workers who give their time and hearts to make this happen. Bless the Jewish Agency for Israel and the faithful workers who see their work as a calling and a mission.

3. Pray for friendship and reconciliation between Arabs and Jews.

Genesis 25:9 —“Then Abraham breathed his last, and died in a good old age... and was gathered to his people. And his sons Isaac and Ishmael buried him in the cave of Machpelah.”

The Jewish-Arab conflict began with the personal struggles of Abraham, Sarah, Ishmael, and Isaac. The roots of modern terrorism and war are buried deep in centuries-old sibling rivalry, marriage problems, conflicts between generations, love stories, political intrigue—and a spiritual battle, waged with righteous motives and deadly zeal.

And yet, for a brief moment after Abraham died, the brothers Ishmael and Isaac came together. Momentary peace blessed Abraham’s burial. In the end, they were just two boys, now grown men, whose father was known as the “friend” of God. Abraham left his sons a legacy of a personal relationship with the Almighty.

We can hope and pray that one day the descendants of Isaac and Ishmael, the Jews and the Arab nations, will find reconciliation and peace when the Prince of Peace reigns in their hearts.

Dear Lord, We ask in Your name that these two brothers can once again be reconciled. That their descendants will embrace their common heritage and be united in faith by a vision, a discovery, a revelation of Jesus as the Messiah, Savior, and one true God. May their eyes and hearts be opened to love their God through His Son Jesus, and to love one another like the brothers they are.

4. Pray for the church to understand her Jewish roots, and to reconnect.

Romans 4:16: The faith of Abraham, who is the father of us all... Ephesians 2:15: So as to create in Himself one new man from the two... When Jesus first taught His disciples to take communion to remember Him, there wasn’t a Gentile in sight. The followers who surrounded Jesus were Jewish. And yet for many Jews over the centuries, the cross of Christ has been a sign of terror, not love. Why so much persecution, hatred, and controversy? And why has the church of Jesus Christ often forsaken these literal brothers and sisters of Jesus? I’ve been shocked to discover how deeply the roots of anti-Semitism infiltrated the early church with tendrils that grew into evils such as the Inquisition, Nazism, and other manifestations of prejudice and hatred directed toward the children of Israel. Now I believe the Lord is opening the eyes of His church to its Jewish roots. My passion and prayer is that my brothers and sisters in the church will fall in love with the Jewish people and realize the debt we owe them. That one day all Jewish people will know the love of Jesus through His body, the church, and will embrace Him as their Messiah. Oh Lord, Father of Jew and Gentile, we pray that we will recognize and be grateful for the origins of our faith. That we will love the Jewish people so deeply and sincerely that they will see the love of Jesus through us and will come to know their Messiah. Teach us our history and our heritage. Guide us in knowing what to do with this knowledge.

5. Pray for the relationship between the chosen people and the Gentiles, whom God calls to "step into the story."

Isaiah 49:22: “See, I will beckon to the Gentiles, I will lift up my banner to the peoples; they will bring your sons in their arms and carry your daughters on their shoulders.”

We are invited to be part of God’s story! We have the opportunity to bridge the seemingly unbridgeable gap between Jew and Gentile, to love God’s chosen people just as God does. There are many organizations and ministries reaching out to the Jewish community, eager to learn about our Jewish roots and wanting to bless Israel and her people in practical and spiritual ways.

Dear Father, You have called the Jewish people “the apple” of Your eye. May we see Israel through Your eyes and love Your children as brothers and sisters of the Savior we love. May we do this with humility and respect toward the people through whom You have chosen to accomplish Your purposes on earth.

6. Pray for understanding of the Feasts of the Lord, for Jews and Christians alike to understand the prophetic significance of the Feasts, and for Jews who observe them to understand their prophetic meaning.

Leviticus 23: These are the feasts of the Lord, holy convocations which you shall proclaim at their appointed times.

We think of seasons as summer, spring, winter, and fall. In Jewish culture, seasons are marked by the seven Feasts of the Lord: Passover, Unleavened Bread, Firstfruits, Pentecost, Trumpets, the Day of Atonement, and Tabernacles. Feasts in the Hebrew language is moed, meaning a divine appointment; also a signal, appointed beforehand. The Hebrew word for convocation is miqra. This means a public meeting or [dress] rehearsal. The Feasts are like dress rehearsals!

The seven “holy convocations” are the “feasts of the Lord” —not Jewish feasts for the Jewish people only, but for anyone who belongs to the Lord. Each of the seven Feasts is part of the total prophetic picture concerning the life, death, resurrection, and second coming of Jesus the Messiah. While Christians are not obligated to observe the Feasts— there is no law that says so—God is inviting us to understand the richness and significance of their meaning.

Almighty God, You are a God of such poetry and such unique ways of communicating to Your people. Thank you for these seven feasts, and may we have “ears that hear and eyes to see” their significance and meaning. We pray that this knowledge will deepen our understanding of You and Your people and the events surrounding us, both in the natural and in the spiritual.

7. Pray for the people of Israel.

Genesis 12:3: “I will bless those who bless you, and I will curse him who curses you; and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.”

Israel is a clock on the wall of prophecy, an indicator of the state of the world, the epicenter of human history and the future. All that is true, but Israel is much more than that. Israel is people, the people about whom the ancients prophesied when they saw the future. These are the people who today inhabit the land, work hard to serve their country and its people, and for many, their God. The prophets saw the people who were alive when the new nation was reborn in 1948, the people who saw the miracle of Ezekiel’s dry bones coming together, gaining strength and muscle, and now breathing life into a fledgling nation (see Ezekiel 37). Israel is the people whose ancestors suffered persecution and pain and even death. Israel is alive with people determined to survive and thrive and possess the Promised Land given to them so many centuries ago.

Dear Lord, Thank you for the moment when Israel became more than an amazing historic site, more than the prophetic clock on the wall, even more than “The Holy Land.” The key to it all, we know now, is the people and Your love for them. And now, may we continue to build friendships and deep, spiritual relationships with these Your people, and may our love for them be real and helpful and a blessing to them. Help us to do what You asked: Comfort, yes, comfort My people!...“Speak comfort to Jerusalem, and cry out to her, that her warfare is ended, That her iniquity is pardoned... The voice of one crying in the wilderness: “Prepare the way of the Lord; Make straight in the desert a highway for our God. Every valley shall be exalted And every mountain and hill brought low; The crooked places shall be made straight And the rough places smooth; The glory of the Lord shall be revealed, And all flesh shall see it together; For the mouth of the Lord has spoken.” —Isaiah 40:1-5