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1-
Christians and Zion: British stirrings
2-
Christian Zionists, Israel and the ‘second coming’
3-
Bible and sword: US Christian Zionists discover
Israel
4-
What is "Christian Zionism"???
The interregnum: Christian Zionism in the Clinton
years
5-
A heavenly match: Bush and the Christian
Zionists
1-
Christians and Zion: British stirrings
The British have had
a long-term fascination with the idea of Israel and its central role in
biblical prophecy that dates back to their earliest recorded literature.
The Epistle of Gildas (circa. 6th century AD) and the Venerable Bede’s
Ecclesiastical History (735 AD) both saw the British as “the new
Israel,” God’s chosen people, who were destined to play a strategic role
despite repeated invasions by their Nordic neighbors. In the British
perception of being an elect, these battles were understood in the
context of Israel’s battles against the Philistines, Babylonians and
others.
A clear resurgence of
such themes was evident in the 16th century, perhaps influenced by the
Protestant Reformation and its emphasis on the Bible and varied
interpretations of its texts, now that Rome had lost its control over
the new clergy and theologians. One of the early expressions of
fascination with the idea of
Israel
was the monograph Apocalypsis Apocalypseos, written by Anglican
clergyman Thomas Brightman in 1585. Brightman urged the British people
to support the return of the Jews to Palestine in order to hasten a
series of prophetic events that would culminate in the return of Jesus.
In 1621, a prominent
member of the British Parliament, attorney Henry Finch, advanced a
similar perspective when he wrote: “The (Jews) shall repair to their own
country, shall inherit all of the land as before, shall live in safety,
and shall continue in it forever.” Finch argued that based on his
interpretation of Genesis 12:3, God would bless those nations that
supported the Jews’ return. However, his idea did not find support from
fellow legislators.
While these writers
cannot be classified as Christian Zionists, they might be viewed as
proto-Christian Zionists, as they prepared the way for those who would
follow. Gradually their views receded, but the turbulence following the
American and French revolutions provoked significant feelings of
insecurity across Europe. As the anxiety rose in the run-up to the
centennial year at the beginning of the 19th century, prophetic
speculation concerning Jesus’ return and related events was in the air.
During the decade
that followed the year 1800, several Christian writers and preachers
began to reflect on the events leading to Jesus’ would-be imminent
return, among them
Louis Way,
an Anglican clergyman. Way taught that it was necessary for the Jews to
return to Palestine as the first stage prior to the Messianic Age, and
he offered speculation as to the timing of Jesus’ second coming. Within
a short period of time, Way gained a wide readership through his journal
The Jewish Expositor, and counted many clergymen, academics and the poet
Samuel Taylor Coleridge as subscribers.
A number of
influential proto-Christian Zionists emerged in the generation that
followed Way. John Nelson Darby (1800-81), a renegade Irish Anglican
priest, added several unique features to Way’s teachings, including the
doctrine of “the Rapture,” whereby “born again Christians” would be
literally removed from history and transferred to heaven prior to Jesus’
return. Darby also placed a restored
Israel
at the center of his theology, claiming that an actual Jewish state
called Israel would become the central instrument for God to fulfill His
plans during the last days of history. Only true (“born again”)
Christians would be removed from history prior to the final battle of
Armageddon through the Rapture based on his literal interpretation of
1 Thessalonians 4:16.
Darby’s extensive
writings and 60-year career as a missionary consolidated a form of
fundamentalism called “premillennialism” (Jesus would return prior to
the Battle of Armageddon and his millennial rule on earth). Darby made
six missionary journeys to
North America, where he became a popular teacher and preacher.
The premillennial theology and its influence on Christian fundamentalism
and the emerging evangelical movement in the
United States can be
directly traced to Darby’s influence.
Christian Zionism is
the direct product of this unusual and recent Western form of Protestant
theology. Found primarily in North America and England, it is now
exported around the globe via satellite television, the internet,
best-selling novels such as the Left Behind series, films and a new
breed of missionaries. These unique doctrines were found among fringe
movements in Christianity throughout the ages, which most Catholic,
Eastern Orthodox and Protestant churches regarded as extreme and
marginal, if not heretical.
One of the
influential British social reformers to be influenced by premillennial
theology was Lord Shaftesbury, a conservative evangelical Christian who
was intimately linked to leading members of the British Parliament. In
1839, Shaftesbury published an essay in the distinguished literary
journal the Quarterly Review, titled “The State and Restoration of the
Jews,” where he argued: “(T)he Jews must be encouraged to return (to
Palestine) in yet greater numbers and become once more the husbandman of
Judea and Galilee.” Writing 57 years before Zionist thinkers Max Nordau,
Israel Zangwill and Theodor Herzl popularized the phrase, Shaftesbury
called the Jews “a people with no country for a country with no people.”
The saying was curiously similar to that of the early Zionists, who
described Palestine as “a land of no people for a people with no land.”
Gradually, Shaftesbury’s views gained acceptance among British
journalists, clergy and politicians.
One of the most
important figures in the development of Christian Zionism was the
Anglican chaplain in
Vienna
during the 1880s, William Hechler, who became an acquaintance of Herzl.
Hechler saw Herzl and the Zionist project as ordained by God in order to
fulfill the prophetic scriptures. He used his extensive political
connections to assist the Zionist leader in his quest for an
international sponsor of the Zionist project. Hechler arranged meetings
with the Ottoman sultan and the German kaiser, but it was his indirect
contacts with the British elite that led to a meeting with the
politician Arthur Balfour. That meeting in 1905 would eventually lead to
Balfour’s November 1917 declaration on a Jewish homeland, which brought
the Zionists their initial international legitimacy. Balfour’s keen
interest in Zionism was prepared at least in part by his Sunday school
faith, a case put forth by Balfour’s biographer and niece, Blanch
Dugdale.
Then-British Prime
Minister David Lloyd-George was perhaps even more predisposed to the
Zionist ideology than Balfour. Journalist Christopher Sykes (son of Mark
Sykes, co-author of the Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916), noted in his
volume Two Studies in Virtue that Lloyd-George’s political advisers were
unable to train his mind on the map of Palestine during negotiations
prior to the Treaty of Versailles, due to his training by fundamentalist
Christian parents and churches on the geography of ancient Israel.
Lloyd-George admitted that he was far more familiar with the cities and
regions of Biblical Israel than with the geography of his native Wales
or of England itself.
British imperial
designs were undoubtedly the primary political motivation in drawing
influential British politicians to support the Zionist project. However,
it is clear that the latter were predisposed to Zionism and to
enthusiastically supporting the proposals of Herzl and leading Zionist
officials such as Chaim Weizmann due to their Christian Zionist
backgrounds. Balfour’s famous speech of 1919 makes the point: “For in
Palestine we do not propose even to go through the form of consulting
the wishes of the present inhabitants of the country…The four great
powers are committed to Zionism, and Zionism, be it right or wrong, good
or bad, is rooted in age-long traditions, in present needs, in future
hopes, of far profounder import than the desires and prejudices of
700,000 Arabs who now inhabit that ancient land.”
The phrases “rooted in age-long traditions” and “future hopes” were
perhaps grounded in Balfour’s British imperial vision, but they were
also buttressed by his understanding of Bible prophecy, which
undergirded his bias toward the Zionist project as well as his grand
designs for Britain’s colonialist policy.
Top
2- Christian Zionists, Israel and the ‘second coming’
The term Christian
Zionism is of relatively recent vintage and was rarely used prior to the
early 1990s. Self-proclaimed Christian Zionist organizations such as the
International Christian Embassy-Jerusalem and the US-based Bridges for
Peace, both with offices in Jerusalem, have been operating for 20 years,
but were under the radar of most Middle East experts and the mainstream
media until after Sept. 11, 2001.
Briefly stated,
Christian Zionism is a movement within Protestant fundamentalism that
sees the modern state of Israel as the fulfillment of Biblical prophecy
and thus deserving of political, financial and religious support.
Christian Zionists work closely with the Israeli government, religious
and secular Jewish Zionist organizations, and are particularly empowered
during periods when the more conservative Likud Party is in control of
the Knesset. Both the secular and religious media place Christian
Zionism in the Protestant evangelical movement, which claims upward of
100-125 million members in the US. However, one would more accurately
categorize it as part of the fundamentalist wing of Protestant
Christianity, since the evangelical movement is far larger and more
diverse in its theology and historical development.
Christian Zionism grew out of a particular theological system called
“premillennial dispensationalism,” which emerged during the early 19th
century in
England,
when there was an outpouring of millennial doctrines. The preaching and
writings of a renegade Irish clergyman, John Nelson Darby, and a
Scotsman, Edward Irving, emphasized the literal and future fulfillment
of such Biblical teachings as “the rapture,” the rise of the Antichrist,
the Battle of Armageddon and the central role that a revived
nation-state of Israel would play during the latter days.
Premillennialism is a
type of Christian theology as old as Christianity itself. It has its
roots in Jewish apocalyptic thought and generally holds that Jesus will
return to earth before he establishes, literally, a millennial kingdom
under his sovereignty. Darby added the distinctive elements of the
rapture (or removal to heaven) of true, born-again Christians prior to
Jesus’ return, and interpreted all major prophetic texts as having
predictive value. He also marked world history according to certain
periods called “dispensations,” that served to guide believers in how
they should conduct themselves. The fulfillment of prophetic signs
became the central task of Christian interpretation.
Darby’s ideas became
a central feature in the teachings of many of the great preachers of the
1880-1900 period, including evangelists Dwight L. Moody and Billy
Sunday, the major Presbyterian preacher James Brooks, Philadelphia radio
preacher Harry B. Ironsides, and Cyrus I. Scofield. When Scofield
applied Darby’s eschatology to the Bible, the result was a superimposed
outline of premillennial dispensationalist notations on the Biblical
text, known as the Scofield Bible. Gradually, the Scofield Bible became
the only version used by most evangelical and fundamentalist Christians
for the next 95 years.
In developing a
working definition of Christian Zionism, one can say it is a 19th and
20th century movement within Protestant fundamentalism that
(particularly last century and today) supports the maximalist claims of
Jewish political Zionism, including Israel’s sovereignty over all of
historic Palestine, including Jerusalem. The modern state of Israel, as
a fulfillment of prophetic scriptures, is regarded as a necessary stage
prior to the second coming of Jesus. Christian Zionism is marked by the
following theological convictions:
l God’s covenant with
Israel is eternal, exclusive and will not be abrogated, according to
Genesis 12:1-7; 15:4-7; 17:1-8; Leviticus 26:44-45; and Deuteronomy
7:7-8.
l There are two
distinct and parallel covenants in the Bible, one with Israel that is
never revoked and the other with the Church that is superseded by the
covenant with Israel. The Church is a “mere parenthesis” in God’s plan,
and as such it will be removed from history during the Rapture (1
Thessalonians 4:13-17 and 5:1-11). At that point, Israel, as a nation,
will be restored as the primary instrument of God on earth.
l Christian Zionists
claim that Genesis 12:3 (“I will bless those who bless you and curse
those who curse you”) should be interpreted literally and lead to
political, economic, moral and spiritual support for the state of Israel
and for the Jewish people in general.
l Christian Zionists
interpret the Bible literally and have a hermeneutic understanding of
Apocalyptic texts the book of Daniel, Zechariah 9-12, Ezekiel 37-8, 1
Thessalonians 4-5 and the Book of Revelations and assume their
messages will be fulfilled in the future. To be more precise, the
version of premillennialism popularized by Darby, Irving and Scofield
should be called “futurist premillennial dispensationalism,” so as to
differentiate it from historic premillennialism, the eschatology held by
many Church Fathers, such as Tertullian, Cyril of Jerusalem, Justin
Martyr and others.
l Christian Zionists
adopt a dispensationalist approach to history as advanced by Darby and
popularized by Scofield’s version of the Bible, published by Oxford
University Press in 1909. Because fundamentalist leaders, clergymen,
Bible colleges, institutes and seminaries used the Scofield Bible, it
became the most significant transmitter of premillennial
dispensationalism and, as such, paved the way for Christian Zionism.
l Christian Zionists
and premillennial dispensationalists have a pessimistic view of history
and wait in eager anticipation for the unfolding of a series of wars and
tragedies pointing to the return of Jesus. The establishment of the
state of Israel,
the rebuilding of the Third Temple, the rise of the Antichrist and the
buildup of armies poised to attack Israel, are among the signs leading
to the final battle and Jesus’ return. Leading Christian Zionist
authorities in Bible prophecy seek to interpret political developments
according to the prophetic schedule of events that should unfold
according to their view of scripture. As an apocalyptic and dualistic
type of theology, the movement looks in history for the escalation of
power and influence of satanic forces aligned to the Antichrist, who, as
the end draws near, will do battle with Israel and those aligned with
it. Judgment will befall nations and individuals according to how they
“bless Israel” (Genesis 12:3).
l Christian Zionism
differs from church doctrine, due in part to its being developed by
anti-state church clergymen and theologians in England. Today its views
find significant support among the charismatic, Pentecostal and
independent Bible churches in Protestant fundamentalism. Christian
Zionists often view mainline Protestant, Orthodox and Catholic
denominations with hostility and have at times considered the World
Council of Churches and related bodies to be tools of the Antichrist. In
the Holy Land, Christian Zionists have been hostile toward Palestinian
Christians and generally detest Muslims as evil forces worshipping
another God. Recent comments by Christian Zionists such as Jerry Falwell,
Pat Robertson and Franklin Graham (the son of evangelist Billy Graham)
have added to the suspicion with which many Muslims view the Christian
West.
Christian Zionism is
a growing political and religious movement within the most conservative
branches of Protestant fundamentalism, but it can also be found in the
broader evangelical branches of Christianity, including the evangelical
wings of the mainline Presbyterian, United Methodist, Lutheran and other
Protestant churches. It thrives during periods of political and economic
unrest such as the present, characterized by international terrorism,
global recession and fear of wars in the
Middle East. With its pessimistic view of history, Christian
Zionism seeks to provide simple and clear answers through a literal and
predictive approach to the Bible. Some estimate that 20-25 million
American fundamentalist Christians hold these views, and the phenomenon
is growing.
Top
3- Bible and sword: US Christian Zionists discover Israel
The first lobbying
effort on behalf of a Jewish state in Palestine was not organized or
initiated by Jews. It occurred in 1891, when a popular fundamentalist
Christian writer and lay-preacher, William E. Blackstone, organized a
national campaign to appeal to the then-president of the United States,
Benjamin Harrison, to support the creation of a Jewish state in
Palestine.
Blackstone gained
notoriety through his 1882 national bestseller Jesus is Coming, his
summary of end-of-time premillennial doctrines. He saw a need to
politically support the Jewish people after hearing horrifying stories
of the pogroms in Russia. Blackstone appealed to multimillionaire
friends such as oil magnate John D. Rockefeller, publisher Charles B.
Scribner and industrialist JP Morgan to finance advertisements and a
petition campaign that were carried in major newspapers from Boston to
the Mississippi. Aside from wealthy financiers, Blackstone also received
support from most members of the US Senate and House of Representatives
and the chief justice of the Supreme Court. Despite powerful backing,
his appeal went nowhere.
There is little record of significant political backing for the Zionist
cause after Blackstone’s initiative, as fundamentalists began to
withdraw from political activity following the Scopes trial and battles
over evolution. However, after a 50-year hiatus, gradual change began
occurring after World War II. Two post-war developments galvanized
conservative Christians the establishment of
Israel
in 1948 and the Cold War. A previously small and marginalized school of
Biblical interpretation called “premillennialism” began to assert itself
within the larger evangelical Protestant community. Israel and the Cold
War were usually linked by premillennial preachers and authors who
interpreted them using selected prophecy texts. According to their
prophetic timetable, as the end of history approached an evil global
empire would emerge under the leadership of a mysterious world leader
called the “Antichrist” and attack Israel, leading to the climactic
Battle of Armageddon.
Israel
was understood by conservative Christians to be at the center of these
Biblical events, and thus commanded unconditional financial and
spiritual support.
When
Israel
captured Jerusalem and the West Bank (not to mention Gaza, Sinai and the
Golan Heights) in the June 1967 Arab-Israeli war, conservative
Christians sensed that history had entered the latter days. L. Nelson
Bell, the father-in-law of evangelist Billy Graham and editor of the
influential journal Christianity Today, wrote in July 1967: “That for
the first time in more than 2,000 years Jerusalem is now in the hands of
the Jews gives the students of the Bible a thrill and a renewed faith in
the accuracy and validity of the Bible.”
Premillennialism
gained popularity through a flurry of books and the activities of radio
evangelists and television preachers. For example, Hal Lindsay’s The
Late, Great Planet Earth, which became one of the best selling books in
history. Lindsay’s message popularized the premillennialist narrative
for a generation of Americans, placing Israel at its historical center.
Lindsay also developed a consulting business that included several
members of the US Congress, the CIA, Israeli generals, the Pentagon and
the then-governor of California, Ronald Reagan.
With the American
bicentennial in 1976, several trends converged in America’s religious
and political landscape, all pointing toward increased US support for
Israel and a higher political profile for the religious right. First,
fundamentalist and evangelical churches became the fastest growing
sector of American Christianity, as mainline Protestant and Roman
Catholic branches saw a decline in their members, budgets and missions.
Second, Jimmy Carter,
an evangelical from the “Bible Belt,” was elected president of the
United States,
giving increased legitimacy to evangelicals as Time magazine confirmed
when it named 1976 “the year of the evangelical.”
Third, following the
1967 war, Israel gained an increased share of US foreign and military
budgets, becoming the “western pillar” of the US strategic alliance
against a Soviet incursion into the
Middle East, particularly after the revolution in
Iran took the country
out of the US orbit. It is during this period that AIPAC and other
pro-Israel organizations started shaping US foreign policy.
Fourth, the Roman
Catholic Church and mainstream Protestant denominations began to develop
a more balanced approach to the Middle East, bringing them closer to the
international consensus on the
Palestine
question. Pro-Israel organizations interpreted this shift as being
anti-Israeli and, in turn, began to court conservative Christians. Marc
Tannenbaum of the American Jewish Committee captured this sentiment well
when he told the Washington Post: “The evangelical community is the
largest and fastest-growing bloc of pro-Jewish sentiment in this
country.”
The fifth development was the victory of Menachem Begin and the
right-wing Likud coalition in the Israeli election of 1977. Begin’s
Revisionist Zionist ideology that mandated establishing an “iron wall”
of Israeli domination, and his policy of annexing Arab land,
accelerating construction of Jewish settlements in the Occupied
Territories and militarizing the conflict with the Arab world, all found
ready support within the American Christian right. Likud’s tactic of
employing Biblical names for the West Bank (Judea and Samaria) and
Biblical arguments to defend its policies (“God gave us this land”)
found resonance with fundamentalist Christians.
A surprising
development, and arguably the lynchpin in forging the fundamentalist
Christian-Zionist alliance, occurred in March 1977, when Carter inserted
the clause “Palestinians deserve a right to their homeland” into a
policy address. Immediately, the pro-Israel lobby and the Christian
right responded with full-page ads in major US newspapers. Their text
stated: “The time has come for evangelical Christians to affirm their
belief in biblical prophecy and Israel’s divine right to the land.” The
text concluded with a line that took direct aim at Carter’s statement:
“We affirm as evangelicals our belief in the promised land to the Jewish
people … We would view with grave concern any effort to carve out of the
Jewish homeland another nation or political entity.”
The advertising
campaign was one of the first significant signs of the Likud’s and the
pro-Israel lobby’s alliance with the Christian right. It redirected
conservative Christian support from Carter, a Democrat, to the
Republican right. Jerry Strober, a former employee of the American
Jewish Committee, coordinated the campaign and told Newsweek magazine:
“The evangelicals are Carter’s constituency and he (had) better listen
to them … The real source of strength the Jews have in this country is
from the evangelicals.”
By the 1980 elections
the political landscape had shifted, both in the Middle East and in the
US. The Iranian hostage crisis helped ensure Carter’s defeat against his
Republican rival, Ronald Reagan. However, it was not the only factor: An
estimated 20 million fundamentalist and evangelical Christians voted for
Reagan and against Carter’s brand of evangelical Christianity that
failed the test of unconditional support for Israel.
The power of the
pro-Israel Republicans became a prominent feature during the Reagan
years, with the president leading the way. On at least seven public
occasions Reagan expressed belief in a final Battle of Armageddon.
During one of his private conversations with AIPAC director Tom Dine,
Reagan said: “You know, I turn back to your 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.” The conversation was leaked to the Jerusalem Post and picked up
across the US on the AP wire. This stunning openness displayed by an
American president with the chief lobbyist for a foreign government
indicated the close cooperation that had developed between the
administration and Israel.
A little-known
feature of the Reagan White House was the series of seminars organized
by the administration and the Christian right with assistance from the
pro-Israel lobby. These sessions were designed to firm up support for
the Republican Party, and, in turn, encourage AIPAC and Christian
Zionist organizations to advance their respective agendas. Participation
by the Christian right in gala dinner briefings at the White House reads
like a Who’s Who of the movement, including author Hal Lindsay, Jerry
Falwell, the head of the Moral Majority, and evangelist Pat Robertson,
as well as Tim LeHaye (co-author of the influential Left Behind series)
and Moral Majority strategist Ed McAteer. State Department official
Robert McFarlane, one of those implicated in the Iran-Contra scandal,
led several briefings. Quietly working in the background was another
Christian fundamentalist, Marine Colonel Oliver North.
Begin developed a close relationship with leading fundamentalists, such
as Falwell, who later received a Learjet from the Israeli government for
his personal travel and in 1981 was honored with the Jabotinsky Award in
an elaborate ceremony in
New York.
When Israel bombed Iraq’s Osirak nuclear reactor in 1981, Begin made his
first telephone call to Falwell, asking him to “explain to the Christian
public the reasons for the bombing.” Only later did he call Reagan.
Falwell also converted former Senator Jesse Helms from a critic of
Israel into one of its staunchest allies in the US Senate, where he
chaired the influential Foreign Relations Committee.
Late in the Reagan administration, a number of scandals in the Christian
right began to erode its public support. Pat Robertson’s ineffective run
for the presidency in 1988 led to a decline in fundamentalist political
fortunes. Resilient as ever, the pro-Israel lobby was able to somewhat
reassert itself with the election of another Bible-toting Southern
Baptist president, Bill Clinton, despite his liberal social agenda.
However, Christian Zionist influence did decline after the Reagan
presidency, though it would return with renewed vigor after the tragedy
of Sept. 11, 2001.
Top
4- What is
"Christian Zionism"???
The interregnum: Christian Zionism in the Clinton years
During his two
mandates, former US President Bill Clinton increasingly took on the role
of chief negotiator and mediator of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Although his background had a hint of Southern Baptist evangelicalism,
Clinton was more inclined toward the secular Labor Party in Israel and
found a close affinity with the late Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
Meanwhile, the Likud-Christian Zionist alliance, which opposed the Oslo
Accords, found itself on the political sidelines.
In
May 1996, Benjamin Netanyahu became Israel’s prime minister, defeating
Shimon Peres. Once again Likud ideology dominated Israeli policy.
Netanyahu had long been a favorite of the Christian Zionists, a
relationship that developed during his years as Israel’s representative
to the UN, and he was a frequent speaker at important Christian Zionist
functions, whether the Feast of Tabernacles hosted by the International
Christian Embassy-Jerusalem or the annual National Prayer Breakfast for
Israel held in Washington.
Within a few months of his election, Netanyahu convened the Israel
Christian Advocacy Council, bringing 17 American fundamentalist leaders
to Israel for an update on the Mideast situation. The tour concluded
with a conference and statement that reflected Likud’s political
platform. The fundamentalist leaders signed a pledge stating, “America
will never, never desert Israel.” Among the other pledges were
statements of support for Israeli settlements in the West Bank, Gaza and
the Golan Heights, and for a united Jerusalem under Israeli sovereignty.
Each declaration was upheld by Biblical citations and a veneer of
evangelical Christian language.
The Christian
Zionist leaders returned to the United States and launched a national
campaign with full-page advertisements in major newspapers under the
banner “Christians call for a united Jerusalem.” Of little concern to
the Christian Zionists was the fact that their positions were in
conflict with official US policy and could undermine the delicate
negotiations of the Oslo process. Signed onto by Pat Robertson of the
Christian Broadcasting Network, Ralph Reed, then director of the
conservative Christian Coalition, prominent minister Jerry Falwell and
Ed McAteer of the Religious Roundtable, the campaign was one of Likud’s
answers to the Clinton-Labor strategy. It was also a direct challenge to
the mainline Protestant and Roman Catholic campaign led by Churches for
Middle East Peace that called for a “shared Jerusalem.”
Likud also turned to the Christian Zionists for help in offsetting the
dramatic decline in contributions to Israel from the American Jewish
establishment during the conflict between the Orthodox and
Reform-Conservative branches of Judaism. When the latter cut back on
their contributions to the Jewish National Fund in the late 1990s,
several Christian Zionist-oriented churches were asked to make up the
difference. The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, led by
a former Anti-Defamation League employee and Orthodox rabbi, Yechiel
Eckstein, claimed to have raised over $5 million, mostly from
fundamentalist Christian sources.
For example, John Hagee, pastor of the Cornerstone Church in San
Antonio, Texas, announced in February 1997 that his church was donating
over $1 million to Israel. Hagee claimed the funds would be used to help
resettle Jews from the Soviet Union in the West Bank and Jerusalem. “We
feel like the coming of Soviet Jews to Israel is a fulfillment of
Biblical prophecy,” Hagee stated. When asked if he realized that support
of Likud’s policies and the increase in Jewish settlements was at
cross-purposes with US policy, Hagee answered: “I am a Bible scholar and
a theologian, and from my perspective the law of God transcends the laws
of the United States government and the US State Department.”
The Netanyahu government used American Christian Zionists in another way
as it sought to undermine the faltering Oslo negotiations. On Oct. 22,
1997, Israel Radio claimed that the Palestinian Authority (PA) was
persecuting Christians. Two days later the
Jerusalem Post
published an article citing “classified information” made known to the
Israeli government in which it was claimed that Palestinian Christians
faced relentless and brutal persecution from the “predominantly Muslim
PA.” The report alleged that “Christian cemeteries have been destroyed,
monasteries have had their telephone lines cut, and there have been
break-ins in convents.” It went on to claim that the PA had “taken
control of the churches and was pressuring Christian leaders to serve as
mouthpieces for Yasser Arafat and opponents of Israel.”
Within a month, US Congressman J. C. Watts, an Oklahoma Republican,
reiterated these charges in a Washington Times opinion piece, blaming
Arafat for the Christian exodus from the Holy Land and calling for a
review and possible freeze on the $307 million in grants pledged to the
PA by the United States. The campaign grew, thanks in part to publicity
generated by the articles of A.M. Rosenthal and William Safire of the
New York Times, and pressure exerted on Congress by Michael Horowitz, a
pro-Israel lobbyist.
Palestinian
Christians were quick to denounce the charges. Mayor Hanna Nasser of
Bethlehem stated: “Our churches have complete freedom, and I’ve never
heard that they’ve been under
pressure.” Together with the international evangelical leader
“Brother Andrew,” president of the
Netherlands based
Open Doors, I led a May 1998 investigation of the Israeli charges on
behalf of Evangelicals for Middle East Understanding. We interviewed
more than 60 Muslim and Christian leaders, people at the grass roots
level throughout the West Bank and Gaza Strip and officials and leaders
from the PA and Israeli government. We found no evidence of PA or Muslim
persecution of Palestinian Christians, although there were three
isolated cases of Christian-Muslim family disputes over intermarriage.
The most telling interview was with Uri Mor, the director of the
Department of Christian Communities at the Israeli Ministry of Religious
Affairs, which oversees all Christian activities in Israel and the
Occupied Territories. Mor said the charges were traceable to David Bar-Ilan,
Netanyahu’s chief spokesman, and told our team that Bar-Ilan used shreds
of information as his “bread and butter” in the propaganda campaign
against the Palestinians.
We later interviewed a staff member of the US Consulate in Jerusalem,
which had previously interviewed Mor and looked into the problem. The
consulate had received a report on the persecution of Christian
Palestinians as a confidential internal document. Upon investigation, it
determined that the basis of the report came from four Palestinians who
had been converted to Christianity by a Messianic Jewish evangelist who
resided in an Israeli settlement. Two had criminal backgrounds and the
others were suspected of collaborating with the Israeli secret services.
The PA had imprisoned the converts, based on their criminal activities,
not their conversions.
Apparently, Bar-Ilan’s
office leaked the report to the International Christian
Embassy-Jerusalem, which then published the stories and launched a
campaign against the PA. After our investigation, Evangelicals for
Middle East Understanding issued a statement clarifying the matter and
citing “disturbing indications that political motivations were behind
the publicity about Christian persecution” in the Holy Land. The
Christian Zionist campaign against the PA came to a halt but undoubtedly
the tactic will be pursued again.
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5- A
heavenly match: Bush and the Christian Zionists
When
Israel responded to the Netanya suicide bombing in March 2002 by
reinvading the West Bank and besieging Jenin, the ensuing international
outcry led US President George W. Bush to order Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon to withdraw his forces from Palestinian areas. Bush sent a
strong message to Sharon at an April 2 news conference: "Withdraw!
Withdraw your
troops
immediately!"
At
that point longtime Christian Zionist spokesman and pro-Israel advocate
Jerry Falwell and other Christian Zionist leaders, working closely with
pro-Israel groups, used their media and internet outlets to mobilize
their constituencies to deliver tens of thousands of telephone calls,
e-mails and letters to the president, telling him to refrain from
pressuring Sharon and to allow Israel to finish its job. In the
aftermath of that campaign, Bush did not utter another word of
opposition to Israeli military actions.
Falwell told the CBS news program 60 Minutes that after the incident,
Israel could count on Bush to "do the right thing for Israel every
time." The lesson was that even when the Bush administration criticized
Israel, the Israelis, conscious of the extensive support they enjoy in
the US Congress, would not take it seriously. As Falwell said: "The
Bible Belt is Israel's safety net in the US."
Christian Zionist organizations and the pro-Israel lobby are among the
significant special interest groups whose interests have converged since
Bush's election to shape the administration's policy toward the Middle
East. In some respects, most of these groups and political tendencies
were lined up and waiting to merge their ambitions even before the
election. The tragic events of Sept. 11, 2001, provided the spark for
this. Among these interest groups, of which we can broadly identify six,
is, first of all, the right wing of the Republican Party. During his
election campaign, Bush, with the help of former members of the Reagan
administration, discarded the
Middle East
strategy of the first Bush administration, which advocated a more
nuanced, multilateral and collaborative approach to the UN and to
international law in resolving conflicts. By 2000, a shift had taken
place in the Republican Party. It began embracing the doctrines of
neoconservative ideologues who advocated US
unilateralism and favored military solutions over diplomacy. This more
aggressive approach was put into action after Sept. 11, and to no one's
surprise,
Israel's war against the Palestinians and its other enemies was soon
linked to the US "war on terrorism."
A second
interest group was comprised of neoconservatives, among them Deputy
Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, who submitted a strategy paper during
the first Bush administration in 1991 advocating unilateralist and
pre-emptive doctrines. Baker and advisers to the president, who viewed
the document as too extreme, buried it. Eventually a larger group of
Reagan hawks found various means to express their displeasure with the
Republican mainstream and leadership.
That displeasure grew during the Clinton era, particularly with regard
to the administration's Middle East policy. In 1996, the Project for a
New American Century was born, based on neoconservative doctrine, and
the same year several neocon leading lights issued a strategy paper for
Benjamin Netanyahu, the Likud candidate for prime minister in Israel's
elections, titled A Clean Break. The paper recommended that Israel
abandon the Oslo
Accords and
adopt a strategy of military aggression toward the Palestinians and Arab
countries. The strategy helped win Netanyahu victory and became the
modus operandi not only of his government but also that of
Sharon.
Bush's election and Sept. 11 gave the neocons the opportunity to shift
US foreign policy toward more military, imperial and unilateralist
approaches. Two other interest groups are multinational construction
firms and the petroleum industry on the one hand, and the arms industry
on the other:
Access to
high quality and inexpensive oil reserves has long been a primary
strategic
US
goal in the Middle East. Multinational companies have alsorecently
become important political players in Iraq's reconstruction efforts,
including Halliburton, an oil company whose former CEO was
Vice-President Dick Cheney, and Bechtel. The US arms industry has also
benefited from US Middle East policy, particularly after Sept. 11,
thanks to the heightened security atmosphere, the wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq and the
post-war
situations in both countries.
Israel, meanwhile, has long been a favorite of US arms producers. A
fifth group is made up of the pro-Israel lobby and think tanks. The
lobby works closely with a variety of special interest groups, including
the Christian right, to exercise considerable influence over the
direction of US Middle East policy. By bringing relentless pressure and
a steady flow of
policy
recommendations to elected officials on a daily basis, pro-Israel
organizations outpace counterinitiatives, whether from Middle Eastern
interest groups, academia, or mainstream churches. It is crucial to
understand that the range of pro-Israel groups does not merely include
Jews, so that the appellation the "Jewish lobby" is simply inaccurate.
Proof of this is the existence of a sixth interest group whose interests
were also served during the Bush administration: fundamentalist
Christian Zionists. During the past two or three decades, the
conservative Evangelical movement has been the fastest growing sector
within the American Christian
churches.
Estimates of the number of evangelicals range from 100-130 million, out
of which 20-25 percent could be classified as fundamentalist some
20-26 million Americans. Of the fundamentalists, most, but not all, are
inclined to support the Christian Zionist position. A recent poll by the
Pew Research Center noted that 58 percent of evangelicals believe in the
Battle
of
Armageddon, an indicator that they would be predisposed to Christian
Zionism.
Today, Christian Zionists form the largest base of support for
pro-Israeli interests in the US. Working since the late 1970s, the
pro-Israel lobby has mobilized both economic and political support for
Israel among fundamentalists. For example, a relatively new
organization, Stand for Israel, has emerged in the past two years to
work closely with AIPAC, the leading pro-Israel lobby, to support and
hold rallies on behalf of Sharon's policies. Last April 2, Stand for
Israel held a convention and lobbying day immediately after the annual
AIPAC convention, inviting many of the same speakers and adopting
several of the same policies. Former US Presidential
candidate
Gary Bauer, a co-founder of Stand for
Israel, addressed the convention and urged attendees to oppose the
Palestinian-Israeli "road map" and an exchange of land for peace.
Bauer
declared: "Whoever sits in the confines of
Washington, and suggests to the people of Israel that they have to give
up more land in exchange for peace, that's an obscenity." Others present
at the dinner reflected the intimate relationship the Bush
administration has with the Christian right and the pro-Israel lobby.
This included US Attorney General John Ashcroft,
Israel's Ambassador to the US Daniel Ayalon, Southern Baptist Convention
leader Richard Land, and House of Representatives Minority Leader Tom
DeLay. DeLay and Congressman Tom Lantos, perennial advocates of Israel's
interests in the House, received the first
annual
Friend of Israel Award for their success in leading Congress to pass
House Resolution 392, restating the strong solidarity of the
US
with Israel in their joint stance against international terrorism.
Pro-Israel
groups and fundamentalist Christian groups have brought significant
political and economic pressures to bear on Congress and the Bush
presidency. Their support for
Sharon's
militant Likud ideology are unquestioned and usually supported by
selected Biblical footnotes. Policies such as increased Israeli
settlements, the pre-emptive assassination of Palestinian leaders,
Israeli sovereignty over all of historic Palestine (especially
Jerusalem), and, if it occurs, the expulsion of Palestinian
President
Yasser Arafat (and indeed the mass expulsion of large sectors of the
Palestinian population), would find ready support within the Christian
right.
*
Donald Wagner
is professor of religion and Middle Eastern studies at North Park
University in Chicago and executive director of the Center for
Middle Eastern Studies. He wrote this study for THE DAILY STAR.
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