Our Kindness Will Come Back - Holy Land Moments Devotionals | IFCJ

Our Kindness Will Come Back - Holy Land Moments Devotionals | IFCJ: Our Kindnesses Will Come Back Credit:IFCJ So Miriam was confined outside the camp for seven days, and the people did not move on till she was brought back. — Numbers 12:15 Each week in synagogue, Jews read through the Torah from Genesis to Deuteronomy. The Torah portion for this week is Behaalotecha, which means “when you raise up,” from Numbers 8:1–12:16. I was touched by the story of Eli Beer, an American Israeli who had contracted coronavirus early on when the virus first hit. Eli is the founder and director of Israel’s volunteer ambulance service and was on a fundraising trip in the U.S. when he became ill. Eli suffered from a serious case and ended up intubated in a Miami hospital. Suddenly, the man responsible for saving so many lives was at great risk of losing his own. Hundreds of thousands of people around the world who knew Eli because of his lifesaving work in Israel, prayed for his recovery. Miraculously, Eli woke up from a thirty-day coma and began breathing on his own. When he was released from the hospital, a philanthropist donated a private jet to transport Eli safely to Israel. Upon landing, more than one ambulance waited for him at the airport. In tribute to

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