“Christian” Zionism
Don Hank
Resize text-+= |
Massive and systematic suppression of truth has long shielded the state of Israel from scrutiny of its crimes and proper punishment.
Fundamentalist Evangelicals, under the influence of ultra-right political activists, generally believe, and teach, that Islam is a dangerous religion that leads to terrorism. Trumpistas used this narrative to keep the Muslims down and garner votes.
These same Evangelicals also generally believe in a doctrine known as “Christian” Zionism, which teaches that the Second Coming of Christ is inextricably linked to the state of Israel and that Christians must support Israel to hasten Christ’s return to earth. Roman Catholicism has long tried to separate itself from “Christian” Zionism but there are undercurrents in Catholic thought that seem destined to bring that Church closer to the Evangelical way of thinking.
Thus, today’s Christianity is at least open to this doctrine while most Evangelicals wholeheartedly accept it.
In keeping with this, US Christianity has, since WW II, been a solid proponent of the US government’s war machine. During the many wars waged by the US since then, pastors have stood before their congregations on Sunday mornings and prayed out loud “Lord, protect our men in uniform.”
Yet, very few pastors have ever thought to ask the Lord to protect the innocent against US bombs and bullets.
To pray for the safety of the Koreans, the Vietnamese, the Iraqis, the Libyans, the Syrians, etc, would have seemed blasphemous to most church goers, who have long unwittingly accepted their role as defenders of US hegemony. After all, throughout the 50s and 60s, Christians and even many of the less religious in America have taken to heart the mission of “stopping the spread of godless communism.” Even when the word “godless” is not expressly mentioned, its meaning is generally tacitly understood. US Christians also subconsciously see themselves as an embodiment of ancient Israel, the chosen people. Since they also identify modern Israel with ancient Israel, there is a tacit understanding that Israel and the US are two sides of the same sacred coin or that Israel is just really part of the US. Thus, AIPAC, the Israel lobby, is exempted from the obligation to register as a foreign lobby even though it certainly qualifies as one.
Thus, loathe as we are to admit it, religion is a key motivator behind US wars, and the “men in uniform” – or since the surge in feminist influence, “men and women in uniform,” have been seen as emissaries of God sent to save the world from un-American, and hence, ungodly, influences — though the US has lost almost all of these wars, just as the Church lost the Crusades.
Indeed the churches are de facto the most effective propaganda arm of the Pentagon, whose weapons of mass destruction have killed millions of mostly civilians, many times more than Muslim terrorists have, who have no air force.
The Bible “scholars” behind these religious Zionist teachings, while differing amongst themselves in secondary details, agree in essence that the modern state of Israel is the embodiment of the resurrected dry bones mentioned in Ezekiel 37. They also agree – with zero scripture to support them – that the leaders of Israel are led by God in their military decisions, just as the leaders of the Israelites once enjoyed divine guidance when marching to battle. The fact that until 2006, modern Israel had never lost a war was attributed by many Evangelicals to divine intervention – when in fact, it was thanks to US weapons and money and to the weakening of Israel’s Arab neighbours thanks to heavy-handed US foreign policy that suppresses states that refuse to recognize Israel.
Thanks to the unconditional support of America’s millions of fundamentalists, the US government can provide military aid to the Israelis and can ignore all of Israel’s human rights abuses, now more and more openly discussed by groups like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, and under investigation by the ICC .
Indeed, based on the above-described religious reasoning, since 1948, the US has vetoed all UN resolutions condemning Israel’s crimes, as documented here and here.
So how is it possible for US “Christians” to ignore Israel’s endless string of human rights abuses when they directly contravene God’s commandments – including the Torah admonition to love they neighbour as thyself.
Very simply, by smugly reminding themselves that the accusers are “unsaved” or “lost” and could not possibly have the spiritual discernment to see that Israel’s every move is the implementation of a divine directive. US Evangelicals pride themselves in being privy to this divinely transmitted knowledge about modern “Israel”, which has, however, no basis in scripture, reason, logic or fact and tramples on Christ’s teachings.
And this is the tragedy not of Christianity itself, but of an interpretation of the scriptures that is not at all in keeping with Christ’s teachings.
Nonetheless, despite the Evangelical insistence that “Christian” Zionism is based on scripture, the texts from which their teachings are derived are cherry-picked completely out of context from various and sundry unrelated passages scattered all over the Old and New Testaments and often contradictory to the Zionist doctrine itself.
Ezekiel's prophecy of a dead Israel that is miraculously resurrected like bones of a long dead cadaver, that would re-assemble themselves and acquire a suit of flesh, tendons and skin, prophesies that the resurrected Israel – whose members have been, for example, led into captivity and then liberated and returned to their homeland, would be obedient to God’s decrees (Ezekiel 37:24).
And yet, Evangelical fundamentalists are the first to admit that today’s secular Israel is not in any way obedient to God’s decrees, at least in their family-friendly anti-abortion and pro-family views. In fact, if we consider the Torah commandment to “love your neighbour as yourself” (Leviticus 19:18), there simply is no way we can honestly see Ezekiel’s prophecy as referring to modern Israel, which in 2021, slaughtered 68 children in an air raid, and many more before that. I refer the reader to the historical documentary Born in Gaza, in which a young Palestinian testifies that he, as a child, and his pals, while walking along a beach, were specifically targeted by an Israeli war-plane that swooped down and fired at them, killing several children, then turned around, came back and fired at the survivors, killing more of them. Only a handful survived. This was more than collateral damage of a war. If we want to be honest, it was genocide.
It is reminiscent of the infamous USS Liberty incident.
Ezekiel himself was exiled by the Babylonian conquerors, so it is logical to assume that he was referring in his prophecy to the return of himself and his fellow expats to Judea, which happened in 587-6 BC. The more devout Israelites that returned home at that time were more likely than today’s secular Israel to have answered Ezekiel’s description of the dry-bones Israel, which was in fact resurrected when Persian king Cyrus, who had inherited the Judean captives from Babylon in the conquest of that country, liberated them.
So why do so many Evangelicals cling so devoutly to a Zionist doctrine that hangs from such a tenuous web of cherry-picked scripture?
The doctrine was first popularized by Cyrus Scofield in his highly popular Reference Bible, which was full of annotations, many of which were products of his imagination. For example, in his annotations on Ezekiel 38, he birthed the popular myth that Russia would attack Israel in the latter days, thereby contributing greatly to the already thriving Russophobia prevailing in the US and Europe.
Scofield, apparently himself a Russophobe, used the flimsiest of excuses to identify the prophesied attacker, which Ezekiel named Gog and Magog, as Russia. He said the names Meschech and Tubal, appearing in the passage, were a “clear mark of identification” because they sounded like Moscow and Tubolsk. The problem is that Moscow doesn’t sound enough like Meshech and Tubal doesn’t sound enough like Tubolsk to make this crystal “clear,” and besides, Tubolsk was never an important enough city to use as an identifier for Russia, which, of course, did not yet exist in the BC. Scofield was clearly just making it up. And yet, when I was growing up in the Bible belt, local fundamentalists declared that the Scofield Bible was inspired by God.
Further, Scofield wrote that Gog and the leader Magog were places located in Russia.
Not even close, as it turns out. According to Ezekiel, Gog is a place and Magog is a leader of it. And in fact, Assyrian court records identify Gog as a place in what is now Turkey, not Russia.
Another reason the resourceful Scofield figured Russia must be the culprit was that, in his words, “Russia and the northern powers [none specified] have been the latest persecutors of dispersed Israel.” Perhaps, at least in 1909 when the Scofield Bible was first published, but then Scofield had never heard of the Third Reich that was yet to come. Otherwise he’d have been obliged to pick Hitler for the role.
This haphazard guesswork approach to scriptural exegesis makes Scofield’s conclusions about the modern Israel all the more questionable to un-indoctrinated people.
The assignment of Russia to the Gog and Magog prophecy was clearly just a contrivance not different from Scofield’s imaginative tale of Israel, which served the Zionists’ purpose at the UN in 1948, when Israel became a nation after European Jewish terrorists ethnically cleansed Palestine by slaughtering dozens of men, women and children in places like Deir Yassin, and after the US, imbued with “Christian” Zionist lore, pressured other nations to vote for the statehood of an entity whose inhabitants were almost all Europeans who had never seen the Middle East before the Zionist mass exodus and settlement of land once home to thousands of Palestinians.
Israel has been slaughtering Palestinians ever since, with America’s tacit blessing.
To understand the terroristic founding of Israel it is necessary, as a bare minimum, to understand the history chronicled in the documentary Al-nakba. (See below)
Noam Chomsky on “Christian” Zionism
Appendix
Al-Nakba: The Palestinian catastrophe - Episode 1 | Featured Documentary
Al-Nakba: The Palestinian catastrophe "The Nakba did not begin in 1948. Its origins lie over two centuries ago…." So begins this four-part series on the 'nakba', meaning the 'catastrophe', about the history of the Palestinian exodus that led to the first Arab-Israeli war in 1948, and the establishment of the state of Israel. This sweeping history starts back in 1799 with Napoleon's attempted advance into Palestine to check British expansion and his appeal to the Jews of the world to reclaim their land in league with France. The narrative moves through the 19th century and into the 20th century with the British Mandate in Palestine and comes right up to date in the 21st century and the ongoing 'nakba' on the ground. Arab, Israeli and Western intellectuals, historians and eye-witnesses provide the central narrative which is accompanied by archive material and documents, many only recently released for the first time.
For Palestinians, 1948 marks the 'nakba' or the 'catastrophe', when hundreds of thousands were forced out of their homes. But for Israelis, the same year marks the creation of their own state. This series attempts to present an understanding of the events of the past that are still shaping the present. This story starts in 1799, outside the walls of Acre in Ottoman-controlled Palestine, when an army under Napoleon Bonaparte besieged the city. It was all part of a campaign to defeat the Ottomans and establish a French presence in the region. In search of allies, Napoleon issued a letter offering Palestine as a homeland to the Jews under French protection. He called on the Jews to ‘rise up’ against what he called their oppressors. Napoleon’s appeal was widely publicised. But he was ultimately defeated. In Acre today, the only memory of him is a statue atop a hill overlooking the city. Yet Napoleon's project for a Jewish homeland in the region under a colonial protectorate did not die, 40 years later, the plan was revived but by the British.
Social Media links: Facebook: / aljazeera
Instagram: https://instagram.com/aljazeera/?ref=...
Twitter: / ajenglish
Website: http://www.aljazeera.com/
google+: https://plus.google.com/+aljazeera/posts #Palestine #Israel #Nakba #Al-Nakba
- In cynicism and power, the US propaganda machine easily surpasses Orwells Ministry of Truth.
- Now the fight against anti-semitism is being weaponised as a new sanctimonious McCarthyism.
- Unless opposed, neither justice nor our Constitutional right to Free Speech will survive this assault.
Print this article
The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of The Greanville Post.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License •
ALL CAPTIONS AND PULL QUOTES BY THE EDITORS NOT THE AUTHORS