“Only one nation, Israel, stands
between ... terrorist aggression and the complete decline of
the United States as a democratic world power... If Israel
falls, the United States can no longer remain a democracy.
...Arab money is being used to control and influence major
U.S. Corporations, making it economically more and more
difficult for the United States to stand against world
terrorism.”[1]
While many would not necessarily go as
far as Mike Evans, it is nevertheless assumed by a large
proportion of Christians in Britain and America that it is
their biblical responsibility to support the State of Israel
and that God’s blessing on them is conditional on their
blessing Israel. Dale Crowley, a Washington based religious
broadcaster, describes this movement as the ‘fastest growing
cult in America’:
‘It’s not composed of “crazies” so much
as mainstream, middle to upper-middle class Americans. They
give millions of dollars each week – to the TV evangelists
who expound the fundamentals of the cult. They read Hal
Lindsey and Tim LaHaye. They have one goal: to facilitate
God’s hand to waft them up to heaven free from all the
trouble, from where they will watch Armageddon and the
destruction of planet earth.’[2]
Christian Zionism is essentially
Christian support for Zionism. Zionism is a political
system based on ethnic exclusivity giving Jews preferential
political rights which are denied to Palestinians. The
United Nations has defined Zionism as a form of racism and
apartheid. Nevertheless, in the words of Grace Halsell the
essential message of the Christian Zionist is this: “every
act taken by Israel is orchestrated by God, and should be
condoned, supported, and even praised by the rest of us.”[3]
Estimates as to the size of the
movement as a whole vary considerably. While critics like
Crowley claim, ‘At least one out of every 10 Americans is a
devotee’, that is between ‘25 to 30 million’, Christian
Zionists such as Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell claim
weekly access to 100 million sympathetic Americans.[4]
What ever the true figure, all are agreed, that number that
is growing in size and influence.[5]
They are led by 80,000 fundamentalist pastors and clergy,
their views disseminated by 1,000 local Christian radio
stations as well as 100 Christian TV stations.[6]
Doug Kreiger lists over 250 pro-Israeli organisations
founded in the 1980s alone.[7]
The Unity Coalition for
Israel, for example, which is the largest, brings together
200 different Jewish and Christian Zionist organisations
including the International Christian Embassy, Christian
Friends of Israel and Bridges for Peace. They claim a
support base of 40 million active members.[8]
These organisations make up a broad coalition which not only
helps keep Sharon’s racist government in power and is also,
as we shall see, helping to shape the aggressive stance of
US foreign policy in the Middle East today.
The rise of contemporary Christian Zionism can be
traced to the founding of the State of Israel in 1948 which
came to be seen as the most significant fulfilment of
biblical prophecy,[9]
indeed for many, ‘the greatest piece of prophetic news that
we have had in the 20th Century.’[10]
Following the Six Day War of 1967, Billy Graham’s
father-in-law Nelson Bell, then editor of Christianity
Today, expressed the sentiments of many American
evangelicals when, in an editorial for the magazine he
wrote, ‘for the first time in more than 2,000 years
Jerusalem is now completely in the hands of the Jews gives a
student of the Bible a thrill and a renewed faith in the
accuracy and validity of the Bible.’[11]
In 1976 a series of events
brought Christian Zionism to the forefront of US mainstream
politics. Jimmy Carter was elected as the ‘born again’
President drawing the support of the evangelical right. In
Israel, Menachem Begin and the right wing Likud Party came
to power the following year. A tripartite coalition slowly
emerged between the political Right, evangelicals and the
Jewish lobby. In 1978, Jimmy Carter acknowledged how his own
pro-Zionist beliefs had influenced his Middle East policy.[12]
In a speech, he described the State of Israel as, ‘a return
at last, to the biblical land from which the Jews were
driven so many hundreds of years ago ... The establishment
of the nation of Israel is the fulfilment of biblical
prophecy and the very essence of its fulfilment.’[13]
However, when Carter vacillated over the aggressive Likud
settlement programme and proposed the creation of a
Palestinian homeland, he alienated the pro-Israeli coalition
of Jews and evangelicals who switched their support to
Ronald Reagan in the 1980 elections. Reagan’s election as
President gave a considerable boost to the Christian Zionist
cause. Don Wagner shows, ‘The election of Ronald Reagan
ushered in not only the most pro-Israel administration in
history but gave several Christian Zionists prominent
political posts. In addition to the President, those who
subscribed to a futurist premillennial theology and
Christian Zionism included Attorney General Ed Meese,
Secretary of Defence Casper Weinberger, and Secretary of the
Interior James Watt.’[14]
‘White House Seminars’ became a regular
feature of Reagan's administration bringing bringing
Christian Zionists like Jerry Falwell, Mike Evans and Hal
Lindsey into direct personal contact with national and
Congressional leaders. In 1982, for instance, Reagan invited
Falwell to give a briefing to the National Security Council
on the possibility of a nuclear war with Russia.[15]
Hal Lindsey also claims Reagan invited him to speak on the
subject of war with Russia to Pentagon officials.[16]
In a personal conversation reported in the Washington Post
two years later in April 1984, Reagan elaborated on his own
personal convictions to Tom Dine, one of Israel’s chief
lobbyists working for the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee (AIPAC): ‘You know, I turn back to the ancient
prophets in the Old Testament and the signs foretelling
Armageddon, and I find myself wondering if - if we're the
generation that is going to see that come about. I don't
know if you’ve noted any of these prophecies lately, but
believe me they certainly describe the times we're going
through.’[17]
While George Bush Snr., Bill
Clinton and George W. Bush do not appear to have shared the
same dispensational presuppositions of either Jimmy Carter
or Ronald Reagan, they nevertheless have maintained, however
reluctantly, the strong pro-Zionist position of their
predecessors.[18]
This is largely due to the influence of the Zionist lobby
considered by many to be the most powerful in the United
States.[19]
Aluf Ben, a spokesman for Shimon Peres, was quoted in the
mass-circulation Tel Aviv daily Ha’aretz as claiming “60
percent of all financial help to Democrats came from Jewish
sources.”[20]
According to the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs,
“Most pro-Israel fund-raisers estimate that at least 60 to
90 percent of Democratic campaign funding comes from Jewish
sources, which also supply perhaps 40 percent of Republican
funding.”[21]
Perhaps this is why it is hard to find a single elected
American politician willing to criticise Israel publicly.
Three Christian leaders, in
particular, each given a White House platform by Reagan,
have probably achieved more than any others in the last
thirty years to ensure American foreign policy remains
pro-Zionist. They are, Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson and Hal
Lindsey. became an avid supporter of the Zionist State.
Grace Halsell describes Falwell’s conversion:
‘The stunning Israeli victory made a
big impact not only on Falwell, but on a lot of Americans
... Remember that in 1967, the United States was mired in
the Vietnam War. Many felt a sense of defeat, helplessness
and discouragement. As Americans, we were made acutely aware
of our own diminished authority, of no longer being able to
police the world or perhaps even our own neighborhoods ...
Many Americans, including Falwell, turned worshipful glances
toward Israel, which they viewed as militarily strong and
invincible. They gave their unstinting approval to the
Israeli take-over of Arab lands because they perceived this
conquest as power and righteousness ... Macho or muscular
Christians such as Falwell credited Israeli General Moshe
Dayan with this victory over Arab forces and termed him the
Miracle Man of the Age, and the Pentagon invited him to
visit Vietnam and tell us how to win that war.’[22]
In 1979, the same year Falwell founded
Moral Majority, the Israeli government gave Falwell a Lear
jet to assist him in his advocacy of Israel. A year later in
1980, Falwell also became the first Gentile to be awarded
the Vladimir Ze’ev Jabotinsky medal for Zionist excellence
by Israel’s Prime Minister, Menachem Begin. Jabotinsky was
the founder of Revisionist Zionism and held that Jews had a
divine mandate to occupy and settle ‘on both sides of the
Jordan River’ and were not accountable to international law.[23]
When Israel bombed Iraq’s nuclear plant in 1981, Begin
phoned Falwell before he called Reagan. He called to ask
Falwell to ‘explain to the Christian public the reasons for
the bombing.’[24]
During the 1982 invasion of Lebanon, Falwell similarly
defended Israel’s actions:
In March 1985, Falwell spoke to the
conservative Rabbinical Assembly in Miami and pledged to
‘mobilize 70 million conservative Christians for Israel.’[26]
In January 1998, when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu visited Washington, his first meeting was with
Jerry Falwell and with The National Unity Coalition for
Israel, a large gathering of more than 500 fundamentalist
Christian leaders, rather than with President Clinton.
According to Donald Wagner, the crowd hailed Netanyahu as
‘the Ronald Reagan of Israel.’ This time Falwell promised to
contact 200,000 pastors and church leaders who receive his
National Liberty Journal[27]
and ask them to ‘tell President Clinton to refrain from
putting pressure on Israel’ to comply with the Oslo accords.[28]
In an interview with The Washington Post in 1999, Falwell
described the West Bank as ‘an integral part of Israel.’
Pressing Israel to withdraw, he added, ‘would be like asking
America to give Texas to Mexico, to bring about a good
relationship. It’s ridiculous.’[29]
In 2000, Falwell revived Moral Majority under the name
People of Faith 2000, ‘a movement to reclaim America as one
nation under God’ and which also takes a strong pro-Israeli
stance.[30]
Falwell has succeeded, probably better than any other
American Christian leader, to ensure his followers recognise
that their Christian duty to God involves providing
unconditional support for the State of Israel.
The Historical Development of
Christian Zionism
If you want to explore in more
detail the historical roots or the theological basis of
the movement, check out the bookstore for some helpful
resources.
Instead, I want to concentrate now
on six aspects of the political agenda of the Christian
Zionist movement and show why Christian Zionists are
implacably opposed to the peace process in the Middle
East. Indeed I want to show how they may be contributing
to the very holocaust in the Middle East which they
predict.
The Political Agenda of Christian
Zionism
We are going to examine six ways in
which Christian Zionist theology has been translated
into political action: This outline illustrates the
correlation between the movements distinctive doctrines
and their political agenda.
|
Doctrine |
Practice |
|
Chosen People |
Standing with Israel |
|
Restorationism |
Facilitating the Aliyah
Programme |
|
Eretz Israel |
Supporting West Bank
Settlements |
|
Jerusalem |
Lobbying for International
Recognition |
|
Temple |
Funding the Rebuilding of
the Temple |
|
The Future |
Opposing Peace & Hastening
Armageddon |
Lets consider each one at a time.
1. The Chosen People :
Supporting Israeli Colonialism
The conviction that the Jewish
people remain God’s ‘chosen people’ in some way separate
from the Church, is deeply rooted in Christian Zionism.
A recent Christianity Today survey of evangelical
opinion about Israel gives an indication of the strength
of Christian Zionism in America. The survey revealed
that 24% believe ‘the biblical mandate for Christians is
to support the State of Israel.’[32]
This is expressed in a variety of ways:
1.1 Standing with Israel
Following the Six Day War in 1967,
apart from the support given by the United States
government, Israel has been largely isolated within the
international community. Hal Lindsey laments: ‘Up to the
time of the 1991 Madrid Conference, the Arabs were
“called upon” to “comply”, “desist”, “refrain” etc. four
times. Israel was “demanded”, “ordered”, etc. to do
General Assembly bidding three hundred and five times.
The UN voted six hundred and five resolutions between
its inception and the Gulf War. Four hundred and twenty
nine of those resolutions, or, sixty-two percent of the
total of the UN’s resolutions were against Israel or its
interests.’[33]
Citing Isaiah 40, Christian
Zionists see their role to, ‘comfort, Israel.’ So for
example, in October 2000, just days after Ariel Sharon’s
provocative visit to the Haram Al-Sharif, which was
deliberately timed to undermine the government of Barak
for negotiating with Arafat over a shared Jerusalem,[34]
and sparking the second intifada, an advertisement
appeared in the New York Times entitled ‘Open Letter to
Evangelical Christians from Jews for Jesus.’ In it they
called upon evangelicals to show solidarity with the
State of Israel at this critical time: ‘Now is the time
to stand with Israel. Dear Brothers and Sisters in
Christ, our hearts are heavy as we watch the images of
violence and bloodshed in the Middle East ... Christian
friends, “The gifts and calling of God are irrevocable”
(Romans 11:29). So must our support for the survival of
Israel in this dark hour be irrevocable. Now is the
time for Christians to stand by Israel.’[35]
1.2 The Israeli Lobby on Capitol
Hill
Until the 1980s, US Middle East
policy was largely peripheral to the wider global threat
posed by Soviet Communism. The protection of Western
Europe through NATO was a higher priority. The collapse
of Communism, however, created a power vacuum in the
Middle East which the US has filled. Following the Gulf
War to liberate Kuwait and then more recently,
Afghanistan from the Taliban then Iraq from the Baath
Party of Saddam Hussein, the US has significantly
increased its influence in the Middle East. Many
contend that US foreign policy has become skewed through
the disproportionate influence of the Zionist lobby.
Michael Lind, the political analyst summarises the ways
in which the Israeli lobby has distorted US foreign
policy: ‘Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza,
enabled by US weapons and money, inflames anti-American
attitudes in Arab and Muslim countries. The expansion of
Israeli settlements on Palestinian land makes a mockery
of the US commitment to self-determination for Kosovo,
East Timor and Tibet. Beyond the region, US policy on
nuclear weapons proliferation is undermined by the
double standard that has led it to ignore Israel’s
nuclear programme while condemning those of India and
Pakistan.’[36]
The Christian Right came to shape
US foreign policy largely through the election of Ronald
Reagan in 1980. His victory over Jimmy Carter gave a
considerable boost to the Christian Zionist cause. His
election, ‘ushered in not only the most pro-Israel
administration in history but gave several Christian
Zionists prominent political posts.’ White House
seminars became a regular feature of Reagan’s
administration bringing leading Christian Zionists like
Jerry Falwell, Mike Evans and Hal Lindsey into personal
contact with national and congressional leaders. In the
same year, the International Christian Embassy,
Jerusalem, was founded with the purpose of coordinating
‘direct political lobbying activities in cooperation
with the Israeli government.’[37]
Along with other organisations making up the Unity
Coalition for Israel, their principal strategy is to
lobby the US media and political establishment, to
challenge what they term ‘disinformation and propaganda’
and to express ‘the truth about Israel.’
The power of the
pro-Israeli lobby ensures Israel continues to receive
between 3-8 billion dollars annually from the US in
grants, loans and subsidies and military assistance.
This power can be gauged by the fact that George Bush
Snr. was the last US President to criticise Israel in
public. During the Gulf War, he enraged the Israeli
lobby by pressurising Israel not to retaliate against
Iraqi attacks and promised the Arab coalition partners
that he would deal with the Palestinian issue. In
September 1991, he complained that, ‘there are 1,000
lobbyists up on the Hill today lobbying Congress for
loan guarantees for Israel and I’m one lonely little guy
down here asking Congress to delay its consideration of
loan guarantees for 120 days.’[38]
Lind points out that the pro-Israeli lobby was
also responsible for encouraging, ‘the greatest abuse of
the Presidential pardon power in American history’ when
Bill Clinton, on his last day in office, controversially
pardoned Mark Rich, the fugitive billionaire on the
FBI’s ‘Most Wanted’ list. In a New York Times article
in February 2001, Clinton explained that he had done it
for Israel:
‘Many present and former high-ranking Israeli officials
of both major political parties and leaders of Jewish
communities in America and Europe urged the pardon of Mr
Rich because of his contributions and services to
Israeli charitable causes’[39]
The pro-Israeli lobby is also accused of involvement in
the selection, appointing and firing of US government
officials and appointees.[40]
In 1980, the former US ambassador to Qatar, Andrew
Killgore, writing in The Washington Report on Middle
East Affairs, gave this critique of the Israeli lobby:
‘It is wrong and perverse for fanatical elements within
the two and a half percent of our population who are
Jewish to hold Congress hostage… America must regard the
Israeli progression from penetration to direction of US
foreign policy as the work of a master criminal.’[41]
Christian Zionists have also been
influential in forging a closer relationship with Israel
by facilitating solidarity tours to the Holy Land.
1.3 Solidarity Tours to Israel
Since 1967, following the capture
of most of the important biblical sites associated with
pilgrimages from Jordan and Syria, Israel has
systematically exploited what has been described as a
lucrative ‘touristic gold mine’,[42]
making tourism a tool of propaganda.[43]
Israel’s greatest success, however, has been to enlist
American evangelical leaders such as Pat Boone and Jerry
Falwell as allies in promoting pro-Israeli solidarity
tours. For example, Falwell’s 'Friendship Tours’ to
Israel include not only meetings with top Israeli
government and military officials but also, .....On-site
tour of modern Israeli battlefields... Official visit to
an Israeli defence installation... strategic military
positions, plus experience first hand the battle Israel
faces as a nation.[44]
Christian Zionists are not,
however, content to support the State of Israel
politically and financially. They are also active in
persuading Jews to emigrate to Israel and fulfil their
destiny.
2. Restorationism : Facilitating
Aliyah from Russia and Eastern Europe
Christian Zionists are convinced
that it is God’s will for the Jewish people to return to
Israel since it was given in perpetuity to the
descendants of Abraham. With the fall of Communism in
the Former Soviet Union (FSU) and Eastern Europe,
Christians Zionists have become increasingly active in
facilitating Jewish émigrés to make aliyah.[45]
Since 1980, a coalition
of Christian Zionist agencies has taken the initiative
in encouraging Jewish people to emigrate to Israel,
seeing this as the fulfilment of prophecy. Exobus was
probably the first Christian Zionist agency to turn the
doctrine of Restorationism into a reality and assist
Jews in the former Soviet Union (FSU) to make aliyah.
Founded in 1984 they have assisted over 56,000 Jewish
people to emigrate to Israel in close cooperation with
the Jewish Agency. Exobus is also probably the largest
Christian agency facilitating aliyah, comprising 80 team
members, drawn from 13 countries and operating 40
vehicles transporting approximately 1,200 Jews overland
from 16 different bases in the FSU each month.[46]
Since 1991, the ICEJ has also paid for the
transportation of another 40,000 immigrants, 15,000 of
whom were taken to Israel on 51 ICEJ sponsored flights.[47]
ICEJ Russian team members are especially active in the
more remote regions of the FSU. They locate Jews,
persuade them to emigrate, help them obtain documents to
prove their Jewish origins, distribute humanitarian
packages and pay for exit permits, passports, debt
repayment, transport and accommodation.[48]
Once in Israel, ICEJ assist émigrés with their
resettlement costs, providing food, clothing, blankets,
kitchen and school supplies as well as medical
equipment.[49]
Believing the Jews remain God’s chosen people and that
God is bringing them back to the land, it is imperative
that they claim all the land God promised their
forefathers.
3. Eretz Israel : Sustaining the
West Bank Settlements
For religious Zionism, Jewish and
Christian, the legitimate borders of Israel are
considerably larger than those presently disputed with
Syria, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority.
Christian involvement in the realisation of
Eretz Israel includes the military justification of
these enlarged borders; the political adoption of the
settlement programme; and economic support for the
settler movement. For example, David Allen Lewis,
President of Christians United for Israel, puts the
territorial claims of Israel into the wider context of
the Middle East. He observes that, ‘The Arabs already
have 99.5 per cent of the land … this cannot be
tolerated.’[50]
In response to international calls
on Israel to give back the West Bank, Bridges for Peace
asks the rhetorical question: ‘What is so sacred about
the June 4th, 1967 line?’ Nothing, they argue since
historically this was all part of biblical Israel and
‘squarely won in defensive battles in 1967 and 1973.’[51]
This conviction that the entire West Bank is integral to
Israel has led many Christian Zionists to ‘adopt’
exclusive Jewish settlements to strengthen their claim
to the land.
Adopting the Settlements
Since 1967, using various economic
and tax incentives as well as appealing to biblical
rhetoric, Israel has encouraged over 400,000 Jews to
colonize East Jerusalem, The West Bank, Gaza and the
Golan Heights through 190 illegal settlements.[52]
Several Christian organisations have given their full
support to this judaization of the Occupied Territories.
The Christian Friends of Israeli Communities (CFOIC),
founded by Ted Beckett in 1995, works in partnership
with Christian Friends of Israel (CFI) and defines a
settlement as: "A piece of land where brave, Jewish
pioneers have taken up residence. In most cases it is a
barren rocky hilltop set up to establish a Jewish
community where none had existed for thousands of
years.’[53]
So far, CFOIC claims 39 illegal
Israeli settlements have been adopted by 50 churches in
the USA, South Africa, Germany, Holland and the
Philippines. For example, Ariel has been adopted by
Faith Bible Chapel, Arvada, Colorado; Hevron by Greater
Harvest, Tallahassee, Florida; Alei Zahav by Calvary
Chapel, Nashville. To strengthen the settlers’ claim to
the land, CFOIC publish maps on their website showing
the few areas of the West Bank given back to the
Palestinian Authority. CFOIC lament what they describe
as the ‘partition’ of the land as ‘the reality of the
“peace process” for those living in the Land G-d
promised the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
for ever!’[54]
The reality is that Palestine is no more. The Separation
Wall has cast in concrete the reality that all
Palestinians can hope for are a few isolated and
impoverished Bantustans similar to the Indian
reservations of North America, although on the West Bank
they are also denied the freedom of movement between
them. Christian Zionists have not only made a clear
stand in justifying Israel’s illegal settlement of the
West Bank. Their ‘adoption’ programme is also intended
to be a means by which financial assistance as well as
practical support for the settlers is delivered.
Funding the Settlers
Besides facilitating the emigration
of Jews to Israel, several Christian Zionist agencies
are active in funding illegal Jewish settlements in the
West Bank. During the 1991 ICEJ Feast of Tabernacles
celebration, for example, representatives from 12
countries presented cheques to the Israeli Prime
Minister, Yitshak Shamir, to help finance the
settlements.[55]
Through their ‘Social Assistance Programme’ ICEJ also
provides financial support for projects in the Jewish
settlements, including bullet proof vests to strengthen
the resolve of settlers, living among what they describe
as ‘3 million hostile Palestinians.’[56]
ICEJ’s ‘Bulletproof Bus for Efrat’ appeal is also
raising $150,000 to purchase an armour plated bus to
transport settlers in and out of the West Bank from
Efrat settlement.[57]
Bridges for Peace (BFP) has a similar scheme called
‘Operation Ezra’ which funds over 50 otherwise
unsustainable projects such as the settlement farm, Sde
Bar, near Beit Jala and the Herodian.[58]
Integral to this strategy is Jerusalem and the
progressive Judaizing, occupation and settlement of Arab
East Jerusalem and the Old City. For Zionism there can
be no compromise, since controlling Jerusalem has always
been a barometer of their existence as a nation.
4. Jerusalem : Lobbying for
International Recognition
At the core of Christian Zionist
support for Israel’s claim to the Occupied Territories
lies the conviction that Jerusalem is, and must remain,
the exclusive and undivided Jewish capital. Attempts to
reach agreement in the wider Arab-Israeli conflict have
so far stalled or stumbled over the final status of
Jerusalem. Christian Zionists are strongly opposed to
any proposal for joint sovereignty or the creation of a
Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem.
As early as February 1984, the ICEJ sent a
representative, Richard Hellman, to testify before the
US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations in Washington
to urge the US to move its embassy from Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem and recognise the city as the capital of
Israel.[59]
Jerry Falwell and the AIPAC lobby also spoke in favour
of such a move. Senator Bob Dole later introduced
legislation in the American Senate which required the US
Embassy to be rebuilt in Jerusalem by 31 May 1999, and
authorised $100 million for ‘preliminary’ spending.[60]
In October 1995 he stated, ‘Israel’s capital is not on
the table in the peace process, and moving the United
States embassy to Jerusalem does nothing to prejudice
the outcome of any future negotiations.’[61]
Lamenting the failure of the US President to ratify the
Senate decision, Dole commented: ‘Jerusalem is today as
it has been for three millennia the heart and soul of
the Jewish people. It is also, and should remain
forever, the eternal and undivided capital of the State
of Israel ... The time has come ... to move beyond
letters, expressions of support, and sense of the
Congress resolutions. The time has come to enact
legislation that will get the job done.’[62]
In 1997 the ICEJ also gave support
to a full page advert placed in the New York Times
entitled, ‘Christians Call for a United Jerusalem.’ It
was signed by 10 evangelical leaders including Pat
Robertson, chairman of Christian Broadcasting Network
and President of the Christian Coalition; Oral Roberts,
founder and chancellor of Oral Roberts University; Jerry
Falwell, founder of Moral Majority; Ed McAteer,
President of the Religious Roundtable; and David Allen
Lewis, President of Christians United for Israel: ‘We,
the undersigned Christian spiritual leaders,
communicating weekly to more than 100 million Christian
Americans, are proud to join together in supporting the
continued sovereignty of the State of Israel over the
holy city of Jerusalem … we believe that Jerusalem, or
any portion of it, shall not be negotiable in the peace
process. Jerusalem must remain undivided as the eternal
capital of the Jewish people.’[63]
Readers were invited to ‘Join us in
our holy mission.’ ‘The battle for Jerusalem has begun,
and it is time for believers in Christ to support our
Jewish brethren and the State of Israel. The time for
unity with the Jewish people is now.’[64]
In 2002, Falwell controversially linked the
terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centre with
Israel’s exclusive claim to Jerusalem. He called upon
his supporters to petition the US President to ‘Keep
Jerusalem Free.’[65]
Christian Zionists have therefore been resolute in their
efforts to get the international community to recognise
Jerusalem as the de facto capital of Israel. However,
even more critical to a Christian Zionist reading of
prophecy is the necessity for the Jewish Temple to be
rebuilt.
5. The Temple : Identifying with
Religious Zionism
Dispensational Christian Zionists,
in particular, are convinced the Jewish Temple must be
rebuilt because, based on their futurist eschatology
from Daniel, the anti-Christ must desecrate it just
prior to the return of Christ. David Brickner claims
that the preparations for rebuilding the Temple began in
1967 with the capture of the Old City of Jerusalem.[66]
Lindsey is equally sure that, ‘right now, as you read
this, preparations are being made to rebuild the Third
Temple.’[67]
Contemporary Christian Zionists are working to achieve
this.
Promoting the Temple Mount
Movement
Randall Price is the leading
dispensational expert on the imminent plans to rebuild
the Jewish Temple. In his 735 page The Coming Last Days
Temple, he provides comprehensive details of all the
Jewish organisations involved in attempts to seize the
Temple Mount, destroy the Al Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the
Rock, rebuild the Jewish Temple and re-institute Temple
worship, priesthood and sacrifices. These include the
Temple Institute and Temple Mount Faithful.[68]
Gershon Salomon is the controversial figurehead of the
movement and founder of The Temple Faithful. Zhava
Glaser, of Jews for Jesus, praises Salomon for his
courage to talk about ‘the most important subject in the
Jewish religion.’Speaking as a guest of the ICEJ, at the
Christian Zionist Congress in 1998, Salomon insisted:
‘The mission of the present
generation is to liberate the Temple Mount and to remove
- I repeat, to remove - the defiling abomination there
... the Jewish people will not be stopped at the gates
leading to the Temple Mount ... We will fly our Israeli
flag over the Temple Mount, which will be minus its Dome
of the Rock and its mosques and will have only our
Israeli flag and our Temple. This is what our generation
must accomplish.’[69]
In a London Times, interview
Salomon insisted that the Islamic shrine must be
destroyed: ‘The Israeli Government must do it. We must
have a war. There will be many nations against us but
God will be our general. I am sure this is a test, that
God is expecting us to move the Dome with no fear from
other nations. The Messiah will not come by himself; we
should bring Him by fighting.’[70]
Since 1967 there have been over 100 armed assaults
on the Haram Al-Sharif by Jewish militants, often led by
rabbis. ‘In no instance has any Israeli Prime Minister
or chief rabbi criticized these assaults.’[71]
Facilitating the Temple Building
Programme
In order to sustain a fully
functioning Temple it is also necessary to identify,
train and consecrate priests to serve in the Temple.
According to the Book of Numbers, the ashes of a pure
unblemished red heifer, itself previously offered by a
ritually pure priest, must be mixed with water and
sprinkled on both them and the Temple furniture. With
the destruction of the Temple in 70 AD the ashes used in
the ceremony were lost and the Jews of the Diaspora have
therefore been ritually unclean ever since.
In 1998, however, Clyde
Lott, a Pentecostal Mississippi rancher, formed Canaan
Land Restoration of Israel, Inc. for the purpose of
raising livestock suitable for Temple sacrifice.[72]
According to Newsweek, in 1997, the first red heifer for
2000 years was born at the Kfar Hassidim kibbutz near
Haifa and named ‘Melody’.[73]
Unfortunately she eventually grew white hairs on her
tail and udder. Undaunted, Chaim Richman, an Orthodox
rabbi and Clyde Lott, the Pentecostal cattleman, have
teamed up to breed red heifers in the Jordan Valley, in
the hope of producing a perfect specimen for sacrifice.[74]
The design and
construction work, furnishings and utensils, the
training of priests and breeding of sacrifices all
require funds and in large measure, like the red heifer,
these are being provided by Christian Zionists.
According to Grace Halsell, Stanley Goldfoot raises up
to $100 million a year for the Jerusalem Temple
Foundation through American Christian TV and radio
stations and evangelical churches.[75]
‘Jewish longing for the Temple, Christian hopes for
the Rapture, and Muslim paranoia about the destruction
of the mosques [are being] stirred to an apocalyptic
boil.’[76]
6. The Future : Opposing Peace
and Hastening Armageddon
The US-Israeli Alliance
Jerry Falwell offers a simple
explanation for the close relationship between America
and Israel. God has been kind to America because
‘America had been kind to the Jew.’[77]
Gary Bauer, president of American Values, put it like
this. “Terrorists don’t understand why Israel and the
United States are joined at the heart.”[78]
Mike Evans, founder and President of Lovers of Israel
Inc. describes the special relationship between Israel
and America: ‘Only one nation, Israel, stands between
... terrorist aggression and the complete decline of the
United States as a democratic world power ... Surely
demonic pressure will endeavour to encourage her to
betray Israel … Israel is the key to America’s survival
… As we stand with Israel, I believe we shall see God
perform a mighty work in our day. God is going to bless
America and Israel as well … If Israel falls, the United
States can no longer remain a democracy.’[79]
For Christian Zionists such as
Falwell and Evans, America is seen as the great
redeemer, her super-power role in the world predicted in
scripture[80]
and providentially ordained.[81]
The two nations of America and Israel are like Siamese
twins perceived to be pitted against an evil world
dominated by Communism and Islam both antithetical to
the Judeo-Christian democratic values of America and
Israel.[82]
Antipathy Toward Arabs
Ramon Bennett illustrates how such prejudices remain
common today describing the modern Arab nations as
‘barbarous’.[83]
‘The customs of hospitality and generosity have changed
little in 4,000 years,’ he claims, ‘nor have the customs
of raiding (thieving, rustling), saving face or
savagery.’[84]
Bennett argues that the Arab ‘is neither a vicious nor,
usually, a calculating liar but a natural one.’[85]
Franklin Graham,
President of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association,
made similar but unguarded remarks in an interview for
the Charlotte Observer in 2000: ‘The Arabs will not be
happy until every Jew is dead. They hate the State of
Israel. They all hate the Jews. God gave the land to the
Jews. The Arabs will never accept that.’[86]
Hatred of Arabs is personified in
attitudes toward Yasser Arafat. In February 1999, for
example, Arafat was invited to attend the 47th annual
Congress-sponsored National Prayer Breakfast in
Washington. The breakfast is normally attended each year
by more than 3,000 political and religious leaders but
on this occasion Arafat’s invitation generated
considerable controversy. The Traditional Values
Coalition, founded by Pat Robertson and representing
40,000 churches, urged congressmen to boycott the
breakfast.[87]
The ICEJ said that attending the breakfast with Arafat
would be ‘like praying with Satan himself.’[88]
Despite considerable pressure from pro-Israeli groups
the invitation was not withdrawn. It was left to the
White House press secretary, Joe Lockhart, to defend the
invitation. He lamented, ‘it’s done every year in the
spirit of reconciliation. And it’s unfortunate that
there are some who don’t fully understand the spirit of
reconciliation and inclusion.’[89]
But I’m afraid it gets worse…
Justifying the Ethnic Cleansing
of Palestine
Frequently, defending Israeli security leads Christian
Zionists to deny Palestinians the same basic human
rights as Israelis. Some are even reluctant to
acknowledge the existence of Palestinians as a distinct
people. Dave Hunt is typical of those who equate
Palestinians with the ancient Philistines, and use the
term Palestinian in an entirely pejorative sense.
Central to the Middle East conflict
today is the issue of the so-called Palestinian
people... Palestinians? There never was a Palestinian
people, nation, language, culture, or religion. The
claim of descent from a Palestinian people who lived for
thousands of years in a land called Palestine is a
hoax!.[90]
Based on Hunt’s logic
presumably the same arguments could be used against the
right to self-determination of citizens of the United
States or indeed of several dozen nations founded in the
20th Century. The history of the persecution of the
Jews illustrates how easily the denigration of an
‘inferior’ people or a denial of their existence as a
distinct people can lead to the rationalizing of their
eradication.
In May 2002, Dick Armey,
the former Republican House Majority leader, made ground
breaking news by justifying the ethnic cleansing of
Palestinians from the Occupied Territories. In an
interview with Chris Matthews on CNBC on May 1st 2002,
Armey stated that: ‘Most of the people who now populate
Israel were transported from all over the world to that
land and they made it their home. The Palestinians can
do the same and we are perfectly content to work with
the Palestinians in doing that. We are not willing to
sacrifice Israel for the notion of a Palestinian
homeland … I’m content to have Israel grab the entire
West Bank … There are many Arab nations that have many
hundreds of thousands of acres of land, soil, and
property and opportunity to create a Palestinian State.’[91]
Matthews gave Armey several
opportunities to clarify that he was not advocating the
ethnic cleansing of all Palestinians from the West Bank,
but Armey was unrepentant. When asked, ‘Have you ever
told George Bush, the President from your home State of
Texas, that you think the Palestinians should get up and
go and leave Palestine and that’s the solution?’, Armey
replied, ‘I’m probably telling him that right now … I am
content to have Israel occupy that land that it now
occupies and to have those people who have been
aggressors against Israel retired to some other arena.’[92]
Armey’s view that Palestinians
should be ‘retired’ is only the latest in a series of
calls in the mainstream US and UK media for the ethnic
cleansing of Palestinians from the Occupied Territories.[93]
While such racist attitudes among Christian Zionists
toward Arabs are common, as are the stereotypes that
Palestinians are terrorists, it is more especially
Muslims who are demonised.
Demonising Islam
Anti-Arab and Islamaphobic
sentiments have become even more widely tolerated since
11th September 2001. Such views have recently been
described as a form of new ‘McCarthyism’.[94]
In February 2002, for example, Pat Robertson caused
considerable controversy when he too described Islam as
a violent religion bent on world domination. He also
claimed American Muslims were forming terrorist cells in
order to destroy the country. Robertson made the
allegations on his Christian Broadcasting Network ‘700
Club.’ After clips showing Muslims in America, the
announcer, Lee Webb asked Robertson, ‘As for the Muslim
immigrants Pat, it makes you wonder, if they have such
contempt for our foreign policy why they’d even want to
live here?’ Robertson replied: ‘Well, as missionaries
possibly to spread the doctrine of Islam ... I have
taken issue with our esteemed President in regard to his
stand in saying Islam is a peaceful religion. It’s just
not. And the Koran makes it very clear, if you see an
infidel, you are to kill him … the fact is our
immigration policies are now so skewed to the Middle
East and away from Europe that we have introduced these
people into our midst and undoubtedly there are
terrorist cells all over them.’[95]
At the 2002 Southern Baptist
Convention[96]
held in Florida, the former national convention leader,
the Rev. Jerry Vines, pastor of the 25,000 member First
Baptist Church of Jacksonville, brought applause from
several thousand participants of the pastors’ conference
when he described Muhammad as ‘a demon-possessed
paedophile’[97]
Such antipathy toward Arabs, denigration of
Palestinians and hatred of Islam invariably leads
Christian Zionists to also oppose any peaceful
resolution of the Arab Israeli conflict which might
require or coerce Israel to relinquish territory or
compromise its security.
Opposing the Peace Process
While Christian Zionists endorse
Israel’s unilateral claim to the Occupied Territories,
they oppose similar Palestinian aspirations to self
determination since they believe the two are
intrinsically incompatible. Christian Zionists have been
most vociferous in opposing the Road Map to Peace
initiative of the US government, UN, European Community
and Russia. Hal Lindsey, for example lamented “I am
heartbroken over the latest stage of the “road map to
peace”, describing it instead as a “Odyssey to
Holocaust”[98]
He went on to rebuke the US president.
“I was sickened to watch a
well-meaning Christian American president talk
incessantly about his vision for a Palestinian state and
Jewish state living side by side in peace.”[99]
At the Interfaith Zionist Leadership Summit, held in
Washington May 2003, Jewish and Christian Zionist
leaders met to consider how to turn the “road map” into
a road-block. Gary Bauer, called the president’s
initiative “a Satanic roadmap”.[100]
To many Christian Zionists, peace talks are not only a
waste of time, they demonstrate a rebellious defiance
toward God’s plans. Such infallible certitudes lead some
Christian Zionists to anathematise those who do not
share their presuppositions.
Forcing God’s Hand
Christian Zionists often attempt to
silence critics with the threat of divine retribution.
For example, recently Hal Lindsey said this,
“My great fear is that President Bush is ignorantly
leading the United States into God’s judgment. For God
warns that He will judge all nations that have
contributed to keeping Israel from living in the land He
sovereignly gave them.”[101]
Christians are left in no doubt
which side to ‘uphold.’ On the 1st January 2002 edition
of the CBN 700 Club, Pat Robertson warned that if the US
‘wants to interfere with Bible
prophecy and wants to move in and wrest East Jerusalem
away from the Jews and give it to Yasser Arafat … heaven
help this nation of ours … If the United States takes
East Jerusalem back and makes it the capital of the
Palestinian State, then we are asking for the wrath of
God to fall on this nation.’[102]
Robertson even suggests that
Rabin’s assassination was an act of God, a judgement for
his betrayal of his own people: ‘This is God’s land and
God has strong words about someone who parts and divides
His land. The rabbis put a curse on Yitzhak Rabin when
he began cutting up the land.’[103]
Such pronouncements
coming from highly influential Christian leaders appear
little different from those of Muslim fundamentalists
who call for a ‘holy war’ against the West. Karen
Armstrong is not alone in tracing within Western
Christian Zionism evidence of the legacy of the
Crusades. Such fundamentalists have, she claims,
‘returned to a classical and extreme religious
crusading.’[104]
7. Conclusions: The Political
Implications of Christian Zionism
We have seen how Christian Zionism
as a movement has profound and deeply destructive
political consequences. Christian Zionists have shown
varying degrees of enthusiasm for implementing six basic
theological convictions that arise from their literal
and futurist reading of the Bible:
1. The belief that the Jews
remain God’s chosen people leads Christian Zionists to a
justification for Israel’s military occupation of
Palestine.
2. As God’s chosen people, the
final restoration of the Jews to Israel is therefore
actively encouraged and facilitated through partnerships
between Christian organisations and the Jewish Agency.
3. Eretz Israel, as delineated
in scripture, belongs exclusively to the Jewish people,
therefore the land must be annexed and the settlements
adopted and strengthened.
4. Jerusalem is regarded as the
eternal and exclusive capital of the Jews, and cannot be
shared with the Palestinians. Therefore, strategically,
Western governments are placed under pressure by
Christian Zionists to relocate their embassies to
Jerusalem and thereby recognise the fact.
5. The Third Temple has yet to
be built, the priesthood consecrated and sacrifices
reinstituted. As dispensational Christian Zionists, in
particular, believe this is prophesied, they offer
varying degrees of support to the Jewish Temple Mount
organisations committed to achieving it.
6. Since Christian Zionists are
convinced there will be an apocalyptic war between good
and evil in the near future, there is no prospect for
lasting peace between Jews and Arabs. Indeed, to
advocate Israel compromise with Islam or coexist with
Palestinians is to identify with those destined to
oppose God and Israel in the imminent battle of
Armageddon.
Clearly, not all Christian Zionists
embrace these views with the same degree of conviction
or involvement. Nevertheless, it has been argued, the
overall consequences of such uncritical support for the
State of Israel, especially among Evangelicals, is
inherently and pathologically destructive, not least to
the very Jewish people they claim to love. At the first
major international and ecumenical conference to examine
this issue, held in Jerusalem in April this year, under
the auspices of Sabeel, over 600 delegates affirmed a
declaration which included the following. “We reject the
heretical teachings of Christian Zionism that facilitate
and support … a form of racial exclusivity and perpetual
war rather than the gospel of universal love, redemption
and reconciliation taught by Jesus Christ.
Rather than condemn the world to
the doom of Armageddon we call upon everyone to liberate
themselves from ideologies of militarism and occupation
and instead to pursue the healing of the world …
We will stand for justice. We can
do no other. Justice alone guarantees a peace that will
lead to reconciliation and a life of security and
prosperity for all the peoples of our land. By standing
on the side of justice, we open ourselves to the work of
peace -- and working for peace makes us children of
God.”
Garth Hewitt has written many songs
about the plight of the Christian community in Israel
and Palestine. One of them, based on some verses from
the Jewish Talmud, is called ‘Ten measures of beauty God
gave to the world’. I would like to close by using it
as a prayer.
May the justice of God fall down
like fire
and bring a home for the
Palestinian.
May the mercy of God pour down like
rain
and protect the Jewish people.
And may the beautiful eyes of a
Holy God
who weeps for His children
Bring the healing hope for His
wounded ones
For the Jew and the Palestinian.
© Stephen Sizer -24th August
2004
Notes
[1] Mike Evans, Israel, America’s Key to Survival,
(Plainfield, NJ: Haven Books), back page, p. xv.
[2] Dale Crowley, ‘Errors and Deceptions of
Dispensational Teachings.’ Capital Hill Voice,
(1996-1997), cited in Halsell, op.cit., p5. Grace
Halsell herself defines Christian Zionism as a cult. See
Halsell, op.cit., p31.
[3] Grace Halsell, ‘Israeli Extremists and
Christian Fundamentalists: The Alliance’, Washington
Report, December (1988), p31.
[4] ‘Christians Call for a United Jerusalem’ New
York Times, 18 April (1997), http://www.cdn-friends-icej.ca/united.html
[5] Halsell, Forcing, op.cit., p50.
[6] Halsell, Forcing, op.cit., p50.
[7] Grace Halsell, Prophecy and Politics,
(Westport, Connecticut, Lawrence Hill, 1986), p178.
[8]
http://www.israelunitycoalition.com
[9] Stanley J. Grenz, The Millennial Maze, (Downers
Grove, Illinois, InterVarsity, 1992), p92; Hal Lindsey,
The Late Great Planet Earth, (London, Lakeland, 1970),
pp43, 53-58; Hannah Hurnard, Watchman on the Walls,
(London, Olive Press, 1950), pp11-12.
[10] Louis T. Talbot & William W. Orr, The Nation
of Israel and the Word of God!, (Los Angeles, Bible
Institute of Los Angeles, 1948), p8.
[11] Donald Wagner, ‘Evangelicals and Israel:
Theological Roots of a Political Alliance’ The Christian
Century, November 4, (1998), pp1020-1026.
[12] Jimmy Carter, The Blood of Abraham, (London,
Sidgwick & Jackson, 1985).
[13] Speech by President Jimmy Carter on 1 May
1978, Department of State Bulletin, vol. 78, No. 2015,
(1978), p4, cited in Sharif, op.cit., p136.
[14] Donald Wagner, ‘Beyond Armageddon’, The Link,
New York: Americans for Middle East Understanding;
October-November, (1992), p5.
[15] Halsell, Prophecy., op.cit., p47
[16] Ibid.
[17] Ronnie Dugger, ‘Does Reagan Expect a Nuclear
Armageddon?’ Washington Post, 18 April (1984).
[18] George Bush, Speech to the American Jewish
Committee, May 3, (2001),
http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/US-Israel/presquote.html
[19] Michael Lind, ‘The Israel Lobby and American
Power’ Prospect, April (2002), pp22-29; Halsell,
Prophecy., op.cit.
[20] Israel Shahak, “Ability of U.S. Jewish Groups
to set Clinton Agenda Depends on Media.” Washington
Report, June 1995, pp. 10, 94.
[21] Publisher’s Page, Washington Report, June 1995,
pp. 122.
[22] Ibid.
[23] Allan C. Brownfeld, ‘Fundamentalists and the
Millennium: A Potential Threat to Middle Eastern Peace’
The Washington Report, June (1999), pp82-84.
[24] Donald Wagner, ‘Evangelicals and Israel:
Theological Roots of a Political Alliance.’ The
Christian Century, November 4, (1998), pp1020-1026.
[25] Brownfeld, op.cit., pp82-84.
[26] Wagner, ‘Evangelicals’, op.cit., pp1020-1026.
[27]
http://www.nljonline.com/feb02
[28] Wagner, ‘Evangelicals’, op.cit., pp1020-1026.
[29] Brownfeld, op.cit., pp82-84.
[30] Jerry Falwell,
http://falwell.com/action%20alerts/actnow.htm
[31] Regular meetings between Christian Zionist
leaders and Israeli officials take place such as at
Harvard Business School. At one held in early 2002,
participants included Avigdor Itzchaki, the Director
General of the Israeli cabinet, James Watt, former
Secretary of the Interior, Mike Evans and Richard
Hellman of CIPAC. Those invited also included Tony
Campolo, James Dobson, Kenneth Copeland, Robert
Schuller, Chuck Smith, Joyce Meyers, E.V. Hill and
Marlin Maddoux.
[32] Cited in Prior, op.cit., p143.
[33] Hal Lindsey, ‘The UN & Israel’ International
Intelligence Briefing, 29th October (1998):
http://www.iib-report.com/pages/transcripts/10.29.98/oct29.htm.
Emphasis in the original.
[34] In July 2001 the Rabbinical Council of
Judea, Samaria and Gaza called on all rabbis to bring
their communities to visit the Temple Mount. This was
the first time that a group of rabbis representing a
significant proportion of the religious Jewish community
had ruled that it was permissible for Jews to ascend the
Temple Mount. Previously this had been forbidden to
orthodox Jews. The rabbis also called upon the Yesha
Council of Jewish settlements to organise mass visits to
the Temple Mount from the settlements which comprise the
more right wing religious Jews. See N. Shragai, ‘Rabbis
call for mass visits to Temple Mount,’ Ha’aretz, 19 July
(2001).
[35] ‘Open Letter to Evangelical Christians from
Jews for Jesus: Now is the Time to Stand with Israel.’
The New York Times, 23 October (2000).
[36] Michael Lind, ‘The Israel Lobby’, Prospect,
April (2002).
[37] Wagner, Anxious., op.cit., p107.
[38] Lind, op.cit.
[39] Ibid.
[40] Ibid.
[41] Ibid.
[42] Shirley Eber, ‘Getting Stoned on Holiday:
Tourism on the Front Line’. In Focus: Tourism Concern.
2, Autumn (1991), pp4-5.
[43] Glen Owen ‘Tourists warned to avoid
flashpoints.’ The Times, 14 August (1997), p2.
1
[44]Don Wagner, 'Beyond Armageddon'. The Link
(Americans for Middle East Understanding) Vol. 25 No. 4
October/November (1992) p. 3.
[45] ‘Aliyah’ means ‘going up’ and is used to
describe going up to Jerusalem on pilgrimage. The Israel
government plays down the involvement of Christians in
bring Jews from the FSU. Brearley claims only 2% of the
Jewish Agency budget for ‘airlifting’ Soviet immigrants
has been contributed by Christian Zionists. This only
includes donations made directly to the Jewish Agency.
Margaret Brearley, ‘Jerusalem for Christian Zionists’ in
Jerusalem, Past and Present in the Purposes of God,
edited by P.W.L. Walker (Croydon, Deo Gloria Trust,
1992), p112;
http://www.christiansforisrael.org
[46]
http://www.christiansforisrael.org
[47] Patricia Golan, ‘On Wings of Faith’
Jerusalem Post, 20 December 2001.
[48] Ibid.
[49] Wagner, op.cit., p108; Golan, op.cit.
[50] David Allen Lewis, ‘Christian Zionist
Theses’, Christians and Israel, (Jerusalem,
International Christian Embassy, Jerusalem, 1996), p9.
[51] Bridges for Peace ‘The Golan Heights Déjà
vu’, Despatch from Jerusalem, September (1999), pp10-11.
[52] ‘Israeli Settlements in the Occupied
Territories’ Foundation for Middle East Peace, March
(2002). FMEP list 190 settlements with a total
population of 213,672 in the West Bank and Gaza; 170,400
in East Jerusalem; and 17,000 in the Golan Heights,
making a total of 401,072 settlers based on 2001
figures.
[53]
http://www.cfoic.com
[54]
Ibid.
[55] Wagner, Anxious, op.cit., p108.
[56] International Christian Embassy,
http://www.icej.org.il/about.html; ‘Life in the
Settlements’, Word from Jerusalem, May (2002), p7.
[57] International Christian Embassy,
‘Bulletproof Bus for Efrat’ appeal, Word from Jerusalem,
May (2002).
[58] Bridges for Peace, ‘New Life on the Farm’
Despatch from Jerusalem, January (2000), p5.
[59] Donald Wagner, Anxious, op.cit., p108.
[60] ‘Bill to re-locate the United States Embassy
from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem’,
http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/s770.16.htm
[61] Middle East Realities 'Lie of the Week'
MiddleEast@aol.com, 01/11/95
[62] Donald Neff, ‘Congress has been irresponsible
on the issue of Jerusalem’, Washington Report, January
(1998), pp90-91.
[63] ‘Christians Call for a United Jerusalem’ New
York Times, 18 April (1997),
http://www.cdn-friends-icej.ca/united.html
[64] Ibid.
[65] Jerry Falwell Ministries, ‘Keep Jerusalem Free
Petition,’ http://falwell.com/
[66] Brickner, Future, op.cit., p137.
[67] Lindsey, Planet, op.cit., p156; Final, op.cit.,
p103.
[68] Rich Robinson, ‘Israeli Groups Involved in
Third Temple Activities’ Jews for Jesus Newsletter 10,
(1993), http://www.jewsforjesus.org
[69] Nadav Shragai, ‘Dreaming of a Third Temple’,
Ha’aretz, 17 September (1998), p3, cited in Price,
Coming, op.cit., p417.
[70] Sam Kiley, ‘The righteous will survive and the
rest will perish’ The Times, 13 December (1999), p39.
[71] Grace Halsell, ‘The Hidden Hand of the Temple
Mount Faithful’ The Washington Report, January (1991),
p8.
[72] Randall Price incorrectly attributes this story
to Time when it actually appeared in Newsweek. He also
misspells one of the contributor’s names. Price, Coming,
op.cit., p375. ‘Red Heifers’ New York Times, 27
December (1998), cited in Halsell, Forcing, p65.
‘Shortly after this Rev. Lott (who
is also a cattleman by trade) came to possess a red
heifer that met all the biblical qualifications of
Numbers chapter 19. Since that historic time in,
November 11, 1994 God has miraculously unveiled His
divine plan for the restoration of Israel, to the
Church. The Holy Ghost has worked during this time to
reveal to Apostolic ministers and laymen the need to
unify their efforts in order to see this project move
forward, both in the Spirit and in the natural. August
11, 1998 Israel is expecting to receive from Canaan Land
Restoration, 500 head of registered Red Angus Heifers.’
Joe Atkins, ‘Biblical mystery of the red heifer affects
farmer in Mississippi’ The Daily Mississippian, 23 July
(1998); Ethan Bronner, ‘Portent in a Pasture? Appearance
of Rare Heifer in Israel Spurs Hopes, Fears’, The Boston
Globe, Sunday, April 6, (1997), pp1, 22.
[73] Kendall Hamilton, Joseph Contreras & Mark
Dennis, ‘The Strange Case of Israel’s Red Heifer,’
Newsweek, May 19, (1997).
[74] Jeremy Shere, ‘A Very Holy Cow’ Jerusalem
Post, May 25, (1997).
[75] Halsell, Prophecy, op.cit., p106.
[76] Lawrence Wright, ‘Forcing the End’,
Frontline,
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/apocalypse/readings/forcing.html
[77] Cited in Halsell, Forcing, op.cit., p100.
[78] Julia Duin, “Zionists meeting brands ‘road map
a heresy’ The Washington Times,
www.washingtontimes.com/national/20030518-114058-5626r.htm
[79] Mike Evans, Israel, America’s Key to Survival,
(Plainfield, New Jersey, Haven Books, 1980), back page,
xv.
[80] Noah Hutchings, U.S. in Prophecy, (Oklahoma
City, Hearthstone Publishing, 2000); Arno Froese, Terror
in America, Understanding the Tragedy, (West Columbia,
Olive Press, 2001); Mark Hitchcock, Is America in
Prophecy? (Portland, Oregon, Multnomah, 2002); Hal
Lindsey, Where is America in Prophecy? video (Murrieta,
California, Hal Lindsey Ministries, 2001).
[81] Michael Lienesch, Redeeming America: Piety and
Politics in the New Christian Right, (Chapel Hill, North
Carolina, University of North Carolina, 1993), p197.
[82] Simon, op.cit., pp71-72.
[83] Bennett, op.cit., p23.
[84] Ibid., p21.
[85] Ibid., p23; John Laffin, The Arab Mind,
(London, Cassell, 1975), p70.
[86] Charlotte Observer, 16th October (2000).
[87] Christian Daily News, 4 February, (1999)
http://www.christiannews.org/archives/1999/20499/news/full.html
[88] Ibid.
[89] Ibid.
[90] Dave Hunt, ‘O Jerusalem, Jerusalem.’ TBC,
September 2000.
[91] Dick Armey, ‘Hardball with Chris Matthews’,
CNBC, 1st May (2002), cited in ‘Republican Party Leader
calls for Ethnic Cleansing of Palestinians on Prime Time
Talk Show’ The Electronic Intifada,
http://electronicintifada.net/actionitems/020502dickarmey.html
See also ‘Rep. Dick Armey calls for
Ethnic Cleansing of Palestinians’ Counterpunch edited by
Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair,
http://www.counterpunch.org/armey0502.html. Dick
Armey and his family are members of Lewisville Bible
Church, Lewisville, Texas.
[92] Ibid.
[93] Charles Krauthammer, ‘Mideast Violence: The
Only Way Out’, Washington Post, 15 May (2001); Emmanuel
A. Winston writing in USA Today called for the
‘resettling the Palestinians in Jordan’ USA Today, 22
February (2002); John Derbyshire, ‘Why don’t I care
about the Palestinians?’, National Review, 9 May (2002);
Clarence Wagner, ‘Apples for Apples, Osama Bin Laden and
Yasser Arafat’, Dispatch from Jerusalem, May (2002), p1,
6, 17.
[94] A term coined by William Safire, a former Nixon
speechwriter and conservative Republican who thought
George Bush Snr. was insufficiently pro-Israel. Cited in
Lind, op.cit.
[95] Alan Cooperman, ‘Robertson Calls Islam a
Religion of Violence, Mayhem.’ Washington Post. 22
February (2002), pAO2.
[96] The Southern Baptist Convention is a coalition
of 42,000 churches with 16 million members. Since the
1980s it has become increasingly fundamentalist. See
http://www.sbcannualmeeting.org/sbc02/
[97] Richard Vara, ‘Texas secession rumor, attacks
on Islam mark Baptist meeting’, Houston Chronicle, 10
June (2002); Alan Cooperman, ‘Anti-Muslim Remarks Stir
Tempest’, Washington Post 19 June (2002). According to
Cooperman, the newly elected president of the Southern
Baptists, the Rev. Jack Graham defended Vine’s speech as
‘accurate’.
[98] Hal Lindsey, ‘If the blind lead the blind.’
WorldNetDaily.com 5 June 2003.
[99] Ibid.
[100] Duin, op.cit.
[101] Lindsey “Blind” op.cit.
[102] Howard Mortman, ‘Don’t ignore Pat Robertson’,
The Frontline, 7 January (2002). http://www.hotlinescoop.com/web/content/columns/extrememortman/020107.htm
[103] Pat Robertson, ‘Pat answers your questions on
Israel,’ 700 Club, Christian Broadcasting Network,
http://cbn.org/700club
[104] Karen Armstrong, Holy War, The Crusades and
Their Impact on Today’s World, (London, Macmillan,
1988), p377.