Israel Is The Conduit
- TayU Yaho
- 14 minutes ago
- 5 min read
Modern Christianity presents itself as a universal religion. Its central message says that the Messiah died for everyone equally, and that faith alone is all that matters. In that framework, the law becomes unnecessary, Israel loses its unique role, and the kingdom becomes detached from the covenant structure established by Yahuah from the beginning.
Scripture does not present the matter that way.
Yahuah chose Israel for a reason. He separated a specific people to preserve His laws, maintain the covenant, protect the lineage through which the Messiah would come, and establish His kingdom order in the earth. Israel became the vessel through which Yahuah revealed His standards, judgments, statutes, feast days, and righteousness to mankind.
Israel is the conduit.
That truth appears throughout Scripture from Genesis to Revelation.
Why Yahuah Chose A People
Yahuah did not randomly select Israel out of favoritism. He established a covenant nation because His kingdom requires structure, laws, order, inheritance, and continuity.
When Yahuah called Abraham, He established a lineage and a mission:
“And in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed.” Genesis 22:18
The nations were blessed through Abraham’s seed, not apart from it.
That distinction matters.
A kingdom cannot exist without laws. A covenant cannot exist without standards. A Messiah cannot arrive without a preserved lineage. Israel carried all three responsibilities.
Deuteronomy explains that Israel received the laws so the nations could witness wisdom and righteousness:
“Keep therefore and do them; for this is your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the nations.” Deuteronomy 4:6
Israel functioned as the visible model of covenant life. The law showed the standard of righteousness, justice, holiness, morality, worship, dietary separation, family structure, and national order.
Without Israel, the law disappears into abstraction.
Without the law, the kingdom loses its foundation.
Christianity’s Greatest Error, Declaring The Law Obsolete
One of Christianity’s greatest theological errors is the claim that the law became obsolete after the Messiah’s death.
That doctrine creates a contradiction.
If the Father established laws for His kingdom, and if those laws define righteousness, then removing the law removes the structure of the kingdom itself.
No government exists without laws.
No kingdom exists without laws.
No covenant exists without laws.
If there is no law, there is no standard for righteousness, sin, justice, holiness, obedience, or rebellion. The very definition of sin depends upon law:
“Sin is the transgression of the law.” 1 John 3:4
If the law vanished completely, then sin itself could no longer be defined.
Christianity correctly teaches that mankind cannot save itself through perfect obedience. Yet it wrongly concludes that inability to keep the law perfectly means the law no longer matters.
That reasoning collapses under Scripture.
A man who fails to obey traffic laws does not eliminate the existence of traffic laws. His failure proves his need for correction, not the abolition of the standard.
The law was never the enemy.
The law reveals the Father’s righteousness.
Paul himself said:
“Wherefore the law is holy, and the commandment holy, and just, and good.” Romans 7:12
The curse never came from the law itself.
The curse came from breaking it.
That is why Yahusha came, not to destroy the standard, but to redeem those who violated it.
Yahusha Did Not Abolish The Law
Yahusha addressed this issue directly:
“Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil.” Matthew 5:17
Christianity often redefines “fulfill” to mean “abolish,” yet Yahusha immediately clarified His meaning:
“Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law.” Matthew 5:18
The heavens still stand.
The earth still exists.
The law still stands.
Yahusha fulfilled the sacrificial role, the prophetic role, and the redemptive role, but fulfillment does not mean annihilation. A king who fulfills the constitution of his kingdom does not erase the laws of the kingdom.
The Messiah’s blood provides mercy when mankind fails.
The law still provides the standard mankind is supposed to pursue.
Those truths work together.
The Law Functions As Light
The law reveals the Father’s character and shows mankind how to live correctly before Him.
Psalm 119 declares:
“Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.” Psalm 119:105
The law functions like a lamp in darkness. It exposes evil, reveals righteousness, and directs behavior toward holiness.
Paul explained:
“I had not known sin, but by the law.” Romans 7:7
The law identifies transgression.
Without law, mankind invents morality according to personal desire. That condition produces confusion, corruption, and lawlessness.
That is exactly what modern society reflects.
Christianity often teaches grace without law, but grace without standards produces disorder. The kingdom of Yahuah was never designed to function without commandments.
The Father established His laws in the earth through Israel so the nations could learn righteousness through visible covenant order.
Israel became the earthly vessel carrying heavenly instruction.
Israel Preserved The Lineage Of The Messiah
The importance of Israel becomes even clearer through the Messiah Himself.
Yahusha did not appear randomly among the nations. Scripture carefully traces His genealogy through Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Judah, and David.
Matthew 1 establishes that lineage deliberately because prophecy required it.
The covenant promises required preservation of a specific bloodline.
That requirement explains why Israel had to remain distinct. If the covenant nation dissolved completely into the surrounding nations, the prophetic lineage would become corrupted and untraceable.
Israel preserved the covenant structure that allowed the Messiah to enter the world lawfully and prophetically.
The nations received the Messiah through Israel.
Again, Israel functioned as the conduit.
The Feast Days Still Matter
The feast days reveal another major misunderstanding.
Many assume the feasts disappeared because animal sacrifices ceased. Yet Scripture presents the feast days as memorials, appointed times, holy convocations, and covenant reminders.
Leviticus 23 repeatedly calls them:
“The feasts of Yahuah.”
They were never merely cultural celebrations. They belonged to Yahuah Himself.
Passover commemorated deliverance from Egypt:
“And this day shall be unto you for a memorial.” Exodus 12:14
The memorial remains meaningful even after the sacrificial system changed.
Yahusha fulfills the sacrificial aspect, but remembrance, obedience, celebration, and covenant identity continue. The feast days still teach the works of Yahuah, structure sacred time, and remind Israel of His promises and acts of deliverance.
Keeping the feasts today does not require a return to animal sacrifice because the Messiah functions as the ultimate sacrifice. Yet the observance itself still carries meaning and obedience.
Passover still matters.
The Feast of Unleavened Bread still teaches separation from sin.
Pentecost still reminds believers of covenant and divine instruction.
Trumpets still points toward coming judgment and gathering.
Tabernacles still reflects dwelling with Yahuah.
These appointed times keep covenant memory alive.
They teach generation after generation who Yahuah is and what He has done.
Universal Religion Removes Covenant Structure
Universal religion removes distinctions, boundaries, and covenant structure. Scripture does not.
The biblical pattern always moves through covenant order:
Yahuah establishes laws.
Israel preserves the covenant.
The Messiah comes through Israel.
The nations learn righteousness through that structure.
Isaiah prophesied:
“For out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of Yahuah from Jerusalem.” Isaiah 2:3
Notice the prophecy does not say the law disappears.
The law goes forth outward from the covenant center.
Scripture never presents a world where the law vanishes and only vague belief remains. The nations were always intended to receive blessing, but through the covenant framework established by Yahuah.
Israel was never chosen merely for privilege.
Israel was chosen for responsibility.
Israel carried the law.
Israel preserved the covenant.
Israel brought forth the Messiah.
Israel serves as the conduit through which Yahuah revealed His kingdom, His laws, and His righteousness to the world.

