Israel was an agricultural nation, each lived on customary land that could never be bought or sold and your Government could not get a rates payment from you. The land belonged to God. I love this, occurs in PNG but NOT in Australia. Our land is leased to us as freehold tenants and the Council terms us as a Debtor, not a citizen.
You were never meant to live in cities. Zion was a temporary place to come 3 times a year for worship, not to live. People go lazy and lived in cities, which the Bible says not to.
You cannot get the average SDA to live in the country growing their own country veggies and living quietly under God, instead they live in cities and rely on supermarket food. Where is the attitude of Israel as a land of milk and honey?
Re 18:4 And I heard another voice from heaven, saying, Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues.
This is an end time message and it says stop living in cities and live in the country. Get away from her plagues,,,,,
What plagues?
1) air pollution for one
2) noise pollution
3) rat race stress
4) media bombardment
5) supermarket factory processed food
Israel was a customary land place, like PNG is. The ancestors have the same land for all tribes.
One problem I see is my father in law Tom lives on an island where his land is now supporting 250 relatives
or "one talks" and the land is shrinking in productivity? Maybe? Hmm?
The problem with customary land living, is dealing with lazy ones who borrow but not return who eat your food but give nothing back - Once I saw Tom borrow 50,000 dollars to give to his family and never good anything back, only a mortgage for the rest of his life.
In Australia we tend to live alone, which is bad I feel. It's easier to make food if many family members pitch in.
For example Australian Greek families do better on the land than British Australians do, they share their resources better.
We can learn much from Israel living on customary land. Imagine if the SDA stopped living in cities like we do?
Shalom