Rabbi Jeremy Gimpel’s recent message to Christians is exactly the wake-up call America’s church needs: stop drifting into a religion of convenience and return to the Hebraic roots that built Western civilization. Speaking from the hills of Judea and from platforms that reach the Christian world, Gimpel urged believers to re-embrace the Torah, the Ten Commandments, and the rhythms of Shabbat as the moral spine that once kept our communities strong and free.
It’s no accident that he delivered this plea from the Land of Israel — Gimpel and his colleagues have turned prophecy into practice by rebuilding biblical life in Judea and inviting Christians to see the Bible in its original context. That hands-on connection to Scripture isn’t abstract theology; it’s a practical reclamation of truth in a world that increasingly prefers fashionable fables to historic faith.
Gimpel didn’t stop at theology; he called Christians to action by urging them to stand with Israel as Ruth stood with Naomi — not as a political checkbox but as a covenantal duty rooted in Scripture. Conservative Americans who love liberty and Judeo‑Christian heritage should hear that as a clarion call: backing Israel is not optional, it is faithful solidarity with the cradle of our faith.
Make no mistake — his criticism of a Christianity untethered from Torah is pointed and prophetic. When churches abandon the Ten Commandments and accommodate the world’s moral drift, they risk becoming something more like Rome’s secularized Christendom than the discipleship Jesus modeled. That is not an academic debate; it is the difference between a living, decisive faith and a toothless cultural club.
This message lands at a perilous moment, with global currents forming that have too often aligned against Israel and the free nations who stand by her. Gimpel warned that the biblical pattern — nations aligning against God’s people — is playing out on the world stage, and Christians must choose where they will stand when the maps are being redrawn. Such frank talk about prophecy and geopolitics is rare in mainstream pulpits today, but it’s exactly what believers need to hear if they intend to remain faithful and resilient.
Patriotic Christians should take this as an invitation to rediscover the moral anchors that produced our republic: the Ten Commandments, Sabbath rest, and an unflinching allegiance to truth. The left’s cultural revolution has hollowed out institutions by severing them from these anchors; returning to biblical discipline is the surest path to cultural renewal and civic strength.
If American pastors and laypeople heed Gimpel’s challenge, they will not only strengthen their own churches but also build the kind of cross‑faith alliance that defends liberty and supports Israel in the hour of need. Small acts of obedience — keeping God’s commandments, praying for Israel, teaching children the Scriptures — add up to a national resistance against the moral rot that threatens our future.
