Willing Slavery: When Scripture Is Used to Train Slaves, Not Disciples
A glimpse into how non-Jews are treated by the Jews, and what the Noahide future is quietly training people to accept
Do you want a glimpse of what a future Noahide system would actually look like, not in theory but in lived reality? Do you want to know how you would be treated, according to patterns that already exist?
You only need to pay attention.
Because systems always reveal themselves early, long before they are universal. They show you how they treat outsiders, how they use labor, how they justify hierarchy, and how they train people to accept it as righteous.
What follows is my own observation.
There is a quiet lesson being taught, and most people never notice it while it is happening. It is taught through small news reports that briefly appear, then quickly disappear. Through volunteer programs framed as spiritual privilege.
Through language that sounds holy while slowly lowering expectations of dignity.
The lesson is simple.
Non-Jews exist to support and slave the Jews.
And Christians, especially, are being trained to see that role as service to God.
If you want to understand where this leads, look first at how non-Jews are already treated.
Years ago, a report described the conditions placed on Chinese workers brought into Israel after Palestinian labor was restricted. These men were invited because the country needed workers. Farms, construction sites, and infrastructure could not function without them.
But once they arrived, the terms were clear.
They were required to sign contracts regulating their private lives. They were forbidden from sexual relationships with Israelis or from marrying Israelis. Authorities openly stated that “male workers may not have any contact with Israeli women.” No investigation followed.
They were forbidden from religious or political activity. Passports were confiscated and wages were withheld. Advocates described their conditions as “almost slave conditions.” Violations meant deportation at their own expense.
This was not hidden - it was openly defended and viewed by Israelis as “ normal”.
Officials explained that the concern was assimilation. Foreigners were described as a social threat simply by being present. The solution was restriction and control.
That is how non-Jews are treated when they are needed but not wanted.
Now look at the other side of the picture.
Today, Israel also receives labor that costs it nothing at all. All it takes is saturating certain Christians with selectively used Old Testament verses, and they arrive willingly to work for free, convinced they are serving God.
Across the United States, Christian communities organize volunteer trips to work on farms and kibbutzim. Volunteers raise their own money, travel at their own expense, and work without pay. They harvest crops, they clean, they build. They do it willingly.
And they are told this is obedience to God.
Media outlets and organizations promoting pro Israel theology openly celebrate this arrangement. Christian volunteers are praised for stepping in during labor shortages. Readers are told there is “a great shortage of workers in the land,” and that helping Israel agriculturally is a spiritual act.
Scripture is quoted and prophecy is invoked.
The message to Christians is consistent: this is your role. Take it with humility. This is faithfulness to God Himself.
Israel365 regularly frames free Christian labor as biblical destiny rather than economic convenience. Articles speak of “a great shortage of workers in the land” and then immediately cast Christian volunteers as the answer, not in practical terms, but in prophetic ones.
Christians are told they are “standing in the gap,” “helping fulfill Scripture,” and “partnering with God’s plan for Israel” by harvesting crops, working on farms, and serving on kibbutzim without pay.
Old Testament verses about nations bringing their strength, labor, and resources to Israel are lifted out of context and applied directly to modern volunteer work. Helping Israeli agriculture is presented not as charity, but as obedience to God Himself.
The implication is clear: foreigners exist to support Israel materially, and Christians should be grateful for the opportunity to do so!
Israel365 also describes this labor as a spiritual privilege, emphasizing that volunteers are “blessed” to serve, that their sacrifice will be rewarded by God, and that refusing such service would mean resisting God’s purposes.
The focus is never on why a developed, well funded state of Israel needs unpaid foreign labor, but on why Christians should feel honored to provide it.
In this way, free labor is not merely accepted. It is defended and sanctified. And it is insulated from criticism by Scripture itself.
Personal volunteer accounts often sound sincere. People describe the work as hard but meaningful. They talk about community meals, simplicity, and spiritual growth. Many genuinely believe they are doing something holy. ( how brainwashed can they be!)
What they rarely question is the structure they are serving.
They are temporary, replaceable helpers. Valued for what they provide, not for who they are.
This is where the pattern becomes clear.
When non-Jews expect wages, control is enforced through contracts and penalties- like the news report about Chinese workers explains.
When non-Jews offer free labor, the arrangement is spiritualized.
Christians are being conditioned to provide free labor for Israel while being taught to see it as obedience to God and blessing. This is not accidental. It is deliberate, sustained preconditioning carried out through theology and emotional manipulation.
See, Jews do not need to force anything when they can secure consent. It does not need coercion when people are trained to call submission humility. Willing servitude looks moral and peaceful. It looks generous. And it is far easier to maintain than resistance.
This is why the Noahide framework is so important to examine. It does not need to be enforced if people accept it voluntarily. It simply needs non-Jews to internalize the idea that one group teaches, defines, and judges, while the rest support, serve, and comply.
And this is where Christians should stop and think.
Many of the same believers working for free on kibbutzim live in countries where their own neighbors are struggling. Where families cannot afford healthcare. Where people drown in medical debt. Where communities lack basic support. Yet they are told their highest duty is to serve a foreign state of Israel that is not poor, not oppressed, and not lacking any resources.
Israel is a developed country. It receives billions of dollars in U.S. aid. Its citizens have universal healthcare funded in part by American taxpayers, while many Americans themselves cannot afford medical care.
And yet Old Testament passages about the poor and oppressed are repeatedly applied to Israel to justify more giving, more labor, more sacrifice.
This is not biblical justice. It is theological misdirection.
Christians are being trained to look past their own suffering, past the needs of their own communities, and to see unpaid labor for a foreign country of Israel as obedience to God.
Folks, this is conditioning. Conditioning to accept future Noahide system.
So yes, if someone wants a glimpse of what a future Noahide system would feel like, they do not need imagination. They already have examples.
Because once people are taught to accept their place willingly, control no longer needs to look cruel. It can look kind. And that is always the most dangerous form.
If you understand that, then you are no longer looking at theory.
You are looking at training for a future under Noahide system.
Sources :
Migrant labor and treatment of non-Jewish workers
The Guardian – Chinese workers in Israel sign no-sex contract (Dec 24, 2003)
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/dec/24/israel
Christian volunteer labor promoted as spiritual service
Israel365News – Volunteering in Israel for Such a Time as This
https://israel365news.com/397062/volunteering-in-israel-for-such-a-time-as-this/
Israel365 – Solidarity Missions & Volunteer Programs
https://israel365.com/solidarity-mission/
First person volunteer accounts on kibbutzim
Times of Israel Blogs – My Experience Volunteering in Israel
https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/my-experience-volunteering-in-israel/
I Googled Israel – A Kibbutz Volunteer’s Diary
https://igoogledisrael.com/a-kibbutz-volunteers-diary/
Kibbutz Volunteer Program – Volunteer experiences and placement descriptions
https://www.kibbutzvolunteer.com/
U.S. financial support to Israel & healthcare context
Congressional Research Service – U.S. Foreign Aid to Israel (reports & summaries)


I read an article about it a year ago. The article said the reason for lack of labor for harvest, was that they had gone to fight Palestinians and were in the combat zone. Christians should know to replace a workforce, so they can engage in legalized murders of Palestinians is not only immoral, but that their service is defense of Evil, and in support of Evil
This kind of sounds like: "You will own nothing, and be happy." Thank you, I'd like to read some of those accounts of happy volunteerism. Thank you for links.
also the scripture: They will not see, they will not know...like a snare being laid? Encroaching danger. The frog in the hot water, thinking it's a jacuzzi? Until.....Reminds me of another scripture: They will be taken by their own snares, and fall into their own pits.