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"For Evangelicals, Supporting Israel is 'God's Foreign
Policy'"
~November
16, 2006~
The following article from
the Nov. 14th New York Times is very relevant
to our work and the challenges we, and you, face in
our faith-based advocacy of Israel-Palestinian peace.
This article, and especially the title, "Evangelicals
Backing Israel: 'God's Foreign Policy'", also requires
us to keep in mind that stereotypes and
generalizations can be wrong and dangerous. There are
many evangelical Christians who pray and work for
Israeli-Palestinian peace alongside CMEP. A number of
leaders of evangelical organizations joined CMEP
leaders in signing a letter to
President Bush that was published in the New
York Times in January 2004. Over 40 evangelical
Christian leaders wrote to
President Bush in July 2002, that they "reject the
way some have distorted biblical passages as their
rationale for uncritical support for every policy and
action of the Israeli government instead of judging
all actions -- of both Israelis and Palestinians -- on
the basis of biblical standards of justice."
For
Evangelicals, Supporting Israel is 'God's Foreign
Policy'
By David Kirkpatrick
New York Times
November 14, 2006
View article online
Washington -- As Israeli
bombs fell on Lebanon for a second week last July, the
Rev. John Hagee of San Antonio arrived in Washington
with 3,500 Evangelicals for the first annual
conference of his newly founded organization,
Christians United For Israel.
At a dinner addressed by the Israeli ambassador, a
handful of Republican senators and the chairman of the
Republican Party, Mr. Hagee read greetings from
President Bush and Prime Minister Ehud Olmert of
Israel and dispatched the crowd with a message for
their representatives in Congress. Tell them "to let
Israel do their job" of destroying the Lebanese
militia, Hezbollah, Mr. Hagee said.
He called the conflict "a battle between good and
evil" and said support for Israel was "God's foreign
policy."
The next day he took the
same message to the White House.
Many conservative
Christians say they believe that the president's
support for Israel fulfills a biblical injunction to
protect the Jewish state, which some of them think
will play a pivotal role in the second coming. Many on
the left, in turn, fear that such theology may
influence decisions the administration makes toward
Israel and the Middle East.
Administration officials say that the meeting with Mr.
Hagee was a courtesy for a political ally and that
evangelical theology has no effect on policy making.
But the alliance of Israel, its evangelical Christian
supporters and President Bush has never been closer or
more potent. In the wake of the summer war in southern
Lebanon, reports that Hezbollah's sponsor, Iran, may
be pushing for nuclear weapons have galvanized
conservative Christian support for Israel into a
political force that will be hard to ignore.
For one thing, white evangelicals make up about a
quarter of the electorate. Whatever strains may be
creeping into the Israeli-American alliance over Iraq,
the Palestinians and Iran, a large part of the
Republican Party's base remains committed to a
fiercely pro-Israel agenda that seems likely to have
an effect on policy choices.
Mr. Hagee says his message
for the White House was, "Every time there has been a
fight like this over the last 50 years, the State
Department would send someone over in a jet to call
for a cease-fire. The terrorists would rest, rearm and
retaliate." He added, "Appeasement has never helped
the Jewish people."
This time Elliott Abrams,
the White House deputy national security adviser who
met with him, essentially agreed, Mr. Hagee said.
Leaving the White House
offices, "we felt we were on the right track," he
said.
Now, in tandem with the
Israeli government, many evangelical Christians have
focused on a new villain, Iran's president, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad. Evangelical broadcasters and commentators
have seized on Mr. Ahmadinejad's comments questioning
the Holocaust and calling for the abolition of the
Israeli state. And many evangelicals now talk of the
Iranian leader as a "mortal threat" to Israel.
Some evangelical leaders say they are wary of reports
that a panel including former Secretary of State James
A. Baker III might recommend negotiating with Iran
about the future of Iraq. "It certainly bothers me,"
said Dr. James C. Dobson, founder of Focus on the
Family and one of the most influential conservative
Christians. "That has the same kind of feel to it as
the British negotiating with Germany, Italy and Japan
in the run up to World War II."
At rallies this fall for Christian conservative
voters, Dr. Dobson sometimes singled out Mr.
Ahmadinejad as a reason to go to the polls, arguing
that Democrats could not be trusted to face down such
dangers. "Hitler told everybody what he was going to
do, and Ahmadinejad is saying exactly what he is going
to do," Dr. Dobson explained. "He is talking
genocide."
The same name, with many
pronunciations, comes up repeatedly on Christian talk
radio shows, said Gary Bauer, a Christian conservative
political organizer. "I am not sure there is a foreign
leader who has made a bigger splash in American
culture since Khrushchev, certainly among committed
Christians," he said.
Mr. Hagee, for his part,
said Mr. Ahmadinejad's comments about Israel and the
Holocaust were part of what motivated him to found
Christians United For Israel late last year. Since the
fight with Hezbollah, Mr. Hagee said, he is doing all
he can to keep the pressure on United States officials
to take a hard line with Iran.
When 5,000 evangelicals gathered last month for a
"Night to Honor Israel" at his San Antonio megachurch,
for example, Mr. Ahmadinejad was much discussed.
Mr. Hagee compared the
Iranian leader with the biblical pharaoh of Egypt.
"Pharaoh threatened Israel and he ended up fish food,"
Mr. Hagee said, to great applause.
Evangelical Christians who
know President Bush, including Marvin Olasky, editor
of the magazine World and a former Bush adviser, said
Mr. Bush, unlike President Reagan, has never shown any
interest in prophecies of the second coming.
Such theological details,
however, have not kept the Israeli government and
Jewish pro-Israel lobbying groups from capitalizing on
the powerful support of American evangelicals. Fearing
a backlash over Lebanon last July, Israeli officials
and their American allies sought public statements of
support from American evangelicals. Some groups
declined because of risks to missionaries in the Arab
world.
Dr. Dobson read a
statement on his popular radio program expressing
"heartache" at the civilian casualties but comparing
Israel's fight to "the Biblical skirmish between
little David and mighty Goliath." He explained, "There
sits little Israel with its five million beleaguered
Jews, surrounded by five hundred million Muslims whose
leaders are determined to drive it into the sea."
Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein,
the founder of the International Fellowship of
Christians and Jews and the Israeli government's
official goodwill ambassador to evangelicals, said the
statements turned out to be superfluous because there
was a groundswell of grass roots evangelical support.
Mr. Eckstein said he had
discovered the depth of that support when he ran
television commercials on the Fox News Channel seeking
donations. The response, mainly from evangelicals,
"burned out the call centers," Mr. Eckstein said.
During the five-week war, his group added 30,000 new
donors. Thanks to the influx of money, he said his
organization has exceeded its income from the first 10
months of last year by 60 percent, putting it on track
to pull in $80 million this year. "The war really
generated a momentum," Mr. Eckstein said.
Evangelicals' support for
Israel, of course, is far from uniform. Mr. Hagee is
an author of several books about the interpretation of
biblical prophecies. He says he believes the Bible
assigns Israel a pivotal role as a harbinger of the
second coming. Citing passages from Revelation and
Ezekiel, he argues that conflict between Israel and
Iran may be a sign that that time is approaching.
Others say they believe
more generally that God maintains his Old Testament
covenant with the Jewish people and thus commands
Christian believers to help protect their "older
brothers."
"My theology indicates
that Israel is covenant land," Dr. Dobson said in an
interview.
Many conservative
Christians and their Jewish allies acknowledge a
certain tension between the evangelical belief in a
Biblical commission to convert non-Christians and
their simultaneous desire to help the Jews of Israel.
"Despite all the spiritual
shortcomings of the Jewish people," Dr. Dobson said,
"according to scripture -- and those criticisms come
not from Christians but from the Old Testament. Just
look in Deuteronomy, where Jews are referred to as a
stiff-necked and stubborn people -- despite all of
that, God has chosen to bless them as his people. God
chose to bless Abraham and his seed not because they
were a perfect people any more than the rest of the
human family."
Dr. Dobson, along with
some other evangelicals, has expressed disappointment
with what he saw as the Bush administration's pressure
on Israel to sign the cease-fire that ended the fight.
"They began by saying they
had to take a hard line, by saying they would support
Israel and they ended up urging them to compromise and
go home," Dr. Dobson said. "All that is going to do is
allow everybody to reload. That didn't solve
anything." (Mr. Hagee said that he believed the
administration gave Israel "ample time" but that
Israel erred by not "unleashing the full might of its
ground troops" until it was too late.)
The Israeli government and
its American allies have been building their alliance
with evangelicals for decades. Israeli officials began
working closely with Mr. Hagee and his church, for
example, a quarter century ago, when he met several
times with then-Prime Minister Menachem Begin.
The Jerusalem Post, an
English-language newspaper, recently started an
edition for American Christians.
The Israeli government
temporarily cut off ties with the Christian
broadcaster Pat Robertson after he suggested that
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's stroke might have been
God's punishment for withdrawing from territory that
belonged to the Biblical Israel. But then Mr.
Robertson flew to Israel during the fight with
Hezbollah. In a gesture of reconciliation, the Israeli
government recently worked with him to film a
television commercial to attract Christian tourists.
"Israel -- to walk where
Jesus walked, to pray where Jesus prayed, to stand
where he stood -- there is no other place like it on
earth," Mr. Robertson says in the commercial,
according to the Jerusalem Post.
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