From Mount Moriah to Gaza: Who Holds Our Children

October 30, 2025
Released hostage Bar Kupershtein arrives to Sheba Medical center (Flash 90)

During his captivity in Gaza, released hostage Bar Kupershtein told of a phone call his mother received. A terrorist contacted her, not to negotiate, but to frighten her. A horrific form of psychological terror. He told her she was failing her son. That she was not doing enough. That if she wanted to see him again she needed to protest, pressure governments, even go to The Hague. His message was clear: your son is in our hands.

She did not break. She did not argue. She did not try to win him over.

She answered immediately:

ā€œMy son is not in your hands but in the hands of the Creator of the world. And you too are in the hands of the Creator of the world.ā€

Silence. Then the terrorist replied, ā€œWell done.ā€

Parents have been saying this since the beginning. Our children are God’s before they are anyone else’s. And Scripture tells these stories too.

Isaac: The walk up the mountain

God commanded Abraham to bring Isaac to Mount Moriah. Abraham did not tell Isaac everything, but he did not hide from the moment either. When Isaac saw there was no lamb for the offering, he asked:

They climbed together. Isaac lay on the altar willingly. And at the final moment, God stopped Abraham and provided a ram instead.

This was not blind faith. It was trust that even when we cannot see the path, God holds it.

Samuel: A vow fulfilled

Hannah prayed for a child with tears and longing. When Samuel was born, she did not cling to him from fear of losing him again. She brought him to serve God in Shiloh, as she had vowed, saying:

Samuel grew up in the sanctuary, mentored by Eli the priest, and became the prophet who anointed kings and guided Israel. Hannah’s dedication did not distance him from greatness, it set his course.

Samson: A destiny announced before birth

Before Samson was born, an angel appeared to his mother and told her:

Samson’s parents raised him knowing his mission did not originate with them. His life included triumph and struggle, strength and failure, but in the end he prayed to God one last time and fulfilled his purpose. His story began and ended in God’s hands.

These are not stories of parents stepping aside. Abraham walked with Isaac. Hannah brought Samuel with love. Samson’s parents taught him his calling.

They acted. They prayed. They trusted.

Faith does not replace effort. It completes it. We do our part, and God carries what we cannot.

That mother on the phone understood it instinctively. So did Abraham, Hannah, and Samson’s parents long before her.

We do not pretend to control the world.
We act with responsibility and courage.
And then we say what Jews have always said:

The world does not decide our children’s fate.
Terror does not decide.
Power does not decide.

God decides.

Sara Lamm

Sara Lamm is a content editor for TheIsraelBible.com and Israel365 Publications. Originally from Virginia, she moved to Israel with her husband and children in 2021. Sara has a Masters Degree in Education from Bankstreet college and taught preschool for almost a decade before making Aliyah to Israel. Sara is passionate about connecting Bible study with ā€œreal life’ and is currently working on a children’sĀ BibleĀ series.

Subscribe

Sign up to receive daily inspiration to your email

Recent Posts
God’s Unfinished Work
Noah Didn’t Save the World. He Helped Destroy It.
When God is Found in a Ringtone

Related Articles

Subscribe

Sign up to receive daily inspiration to your email