Okay. What is your take on the below.
This is what I call a verse dump. It's a whole lot of verses to deal with, and it usually stands uncontested due to the fact that no one has the patience to explain every single point. I don't have the patience, either, but I'll start with something and hope you fail to read to the end so you'll never know that I did not cover everything.
Israel will be reestablished as a nation. Isaiah 11:11
Fair enough, if you can accept that God's people are those who pointedly reject the Son of God. I reject that idea flatly.
British ships will be the first to bring the Jewish people home. Isaiah 60:9
That verse says nothing about the British. Tarshish was many miles away from Britain.
Israel will come back as one nation, not two. Hosea 1:11; Ezekiel 37:18,19,22
The modern nation of Israel is not the union of the ancient nation of Israel with the ancient nation of Judah. It is only the descendants of the nation of Judah borrowing (or stealing) the name of ancient Israel (of the two kingdoms). The descendants of ancient Israel from the time of the two kingdoms are
not included in this nation
at all. Therefore, the prophecy is unfulfilled as you describe it.
Israel will be reestablished by a leader named David. Hosea 3:5
Not a leader. A
king. Not just any king, but King David. The modern nation of Israel has no king. Therefore the prophecy is not fulfilled by this interpretation.
The revived state will be named Israel. Ezekiel 37:11
If I call the Kingdom of Heaven, the followers of Christ, the people of Israel, then I accomplish just as much.
The Star of David will be on the Israeli flag. Isaiah 11:10
That verse says nothing about the star of David. It refers to the root of Jesse, which, to all good Christians is Jesus Christ.
The nation will be reestablished in the ancient land of Canaan. Jeramiah 30:2,3; Ezekiel 37:12
The first verse refers to Israel and Judah. Only Judah has returned, and not as God's people. If sequence matters, they must be God's people first, and then return. The second verse refers to a resurrection, which has not happened. You might take this as symbolism, but I might just as easily take it literally.
Israel will no longer speak of being freed from Egypt. Jeramiah 16:14,15
Specifically, it will be known as the people brought back out of the
north country. I'd be willing to bet that you don't consider Europe to be the north country, nor could you easily define what the north country is. Israel, as opposed to Judah, was conquered by the Assyrians and exiled to the north. This excludes the people of Judah, which, as I mentioned before, are the sole inheritors of the modern nation of Israel.
Israel will not be restored as a monarchy. Micah 5:5
The verse you cite says nothing about Israel not being a monarchy. In fact, if you read it in context, starting from at least verse two, you'll see that the entire passage says exactly the opposite. It describes the reign of the coming messiah. You'll note that the messiah is Christ, and he reigns over
us, and not
them.
Israel will be established on the date predicted. Daniel 4; Ezekiel 4:4-6
The first passage says nothing about the date of the modern nation of Israel's establishment. The second one also does not, but it does, at least, predict the beginning of Israel's and Judah's exiles. Israel was exiled first, and Judah was exiled a little while after that. Until then, God put up with them.
The Hebrew language will be revived in Israel. Jeramiah 31:23
That verse has nothing to do with Hebrew or any other language. Calling it that isn't honest. Just read the verse, for crying out loud. It says that, "they shall use these words," and it follows that the words that they shall use are, "The Lord bless you, O habitation of righteousness, O holy hill!" (depending on the translation).
Jerusalem will be divided. Zechariah 14:1-3
What it says, is, "The city shall be taken, The houses rifled, And the women ravished. Half of the city shall go into captivity...." Before the Jews returned to Israel, it belonged to the people that we know as the Palestinians. The city was taken by the Jews of Israel. Did they ravish the women? Did they rob the houses? Did they take half of its citizens as prisoners? The following verses talk about the Lord going forth and fighting against the invaders. Is God going to fight against the Jewish invaders? Bad, bad interpretation going on, here.
Well, anyway, I'm done, here. A batter gets three chances at bat before striking-out. I let you have four times that. If anyone cares to meet all of the other points, they're welcome to take up that burden.