31°46′40.7″N 35°14′07.7″E
Top Stories
The Wire
← The Wire
The Nation · Dispatch · SocietyDeveloping

Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu: global upheaval is part of a biblical redemptive process

The Zioneer Intelligence Desk
Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu: global upheaval is part of a biblical redemptive process

Primary source Internal intake · 1 reviewed intake signal · Desk window 15:05

TL;DR

Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu, a prominent religious-Zionist figure, released a statement arguing that current global wars, broken alliances, and pressure on Israel are not random chaos but part of a larger biblical redemptive process. He said redemption draws near as Israel is being pushed to stand in faith and covenant identity.

01 · THE DISPATCH

Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu, a leading religious-Zionist voice and the rabbi of Safed, offered a biblical perspective on current global events in a statement distributed Sunday afternoon. He described wars, broken promises, shifting alliances, and pressure on Israel not as random political chaos but as signs of a deeper redemptive process.

“Redemption draws near,” Eliyahu said, according to the statement. He assessed that the unfolding reality is pushing Israel toward standing in faith, strength, and covenant identity. No specific recent event was cited as the trigger for the message.

As The Zioneer has previously covered, Eliyahu recently released a book on biblical prophecy (“Sefer HaNevuah”) and has weighed in on political issues, including rebuking former President Trump’s claim that Israel would not survive without US support. His comments represent a religious-Zionist interpretation of current strategic developments rather than a factual claim about specific events.

Related dispatches
03 · Source and signal

Source and signal

A single-sourced dispatch is never rated Confirmed or Strong. Its Signal strengthens only when a second, independent source corroborates it.

  • Internal intake
Desk accountability

This dispatch is published under The Zioneer Intelligence Desk. Raw intake channels remain internal provenance; an external outlet or channel is named only when it materially helps readers evaluate a specific claim.