Stephen Sizer
Evangelicals for Middle East Understanding
Middle East Leadership Briefing, Billy Graham Centre, Wheaton College.
9 November 2012
Middle East Leadership Briefing, Billy Graham Centre, Wheaton College.
9 November 2012
1. Introduction
On September 12th, following the
tragic news of the murder of Ambassador Stevens, together with members of his
staff, sheltering in the US Consulate in Benghazi, a grief stricken Secretary
of State, Hilary Clinton asked a simple question. A question that was on the
lips of many Americans: “How could this happen in a country we helped liberate,
in a city we helped save from destruction?” Andrew Bacevich, writing in
Newsweek, asks,
“Why the Arab anger against
the United States? Why the absence of gratitude among the very people the United
States helped save, in the very countries Americans helped liberate? The way
Secretary Clinton frames the question practically guarantees a self-satisfying
but defective answer.”
The question, he argues, is
predicated on three propositions that are regarded as sacrosanct by most US
politicians and policy makers.
“First: humanity yearns for liberation, as defined in Western
(meaning predominantly liberal and secular terms). Second: the United States
has a providentially assigned role to nurture and promote this liberation…
Third: given that American intentions are righteous and benign (most of the
time) – the exercise of US power on a global scale merits respect and ought to
command compliance.”[i]
I would add a fourth proposition, assumed as self evident, especially among Evangelicals, that, as God’s ‘chosen people’ the security of the State of Israel is synonymous with US interests in the Middle East and her God ordained role.
The problem is that the Arab world and Muslims, in particular, do not only not share these propositions, they repudiate them theologically. It is not that they do not aspire to political freedom from despotic rulers and oppressive governments. The Arab Spring has shown that many do indeed hunger for freedom. The problem is, observes Bacevich, “that 21stcentury Muslims don’t necessarily buy America’s 21st century definition of it – a definition increasingly devoid of moral content.”
Freedom of speech is assumed sacrosanct even if it offends those
of other religions. Whether the movie, Innocence of Muslims was indeed responsible for sparking
Muslim outrage and the subsequent violence against US interests is irrelevant.
The promotion of the film by Fundamentalist Christians and their antipathy
toward Islam certainly is. What we tend to ignore, while Muslims cannot
forget, it the simple fact is that for more than 100 years, Christians in the
USA and Europe have sponsored, defended, funded and sustained the Zionist
enterprise in preference to developing normative relations with the Arab world.
Why else, for example, after 45 years, does Israel continue to
occupy territory in Lebanon, Syria and Palestine?
Why is there such a close
relationship today between Evangelicals in America and the State of
Israel? The roots of this relationship lie within the Protestant
Reformation which brought about a renewed interest in the Old Testament and
God’s dealings with the Jewish people. After nearly 1500 years, a new
assessment of the place of the Jews within the purposes of God was emerging. We
only have time for a cursory look at some of the individuals and movements who
have shaped our political involvement in the Middle East
2. Adventism
and the End of the World
The late 18th and early 19th centuries
saw a dramatic paradigm shift from the optimism of postmillennialism to a
deeply pessimistic premillennialism, following a sustained period of turmoil on
both sides of the Atlantic.[ii] There was the American War of
Independence (1775-1784), the French Revolution (1789-1793) and then the
Napoleonic Wars (1809-1815).
His plan was to create a United States of Europe, each state
ruled by a compliant monarch, subject to himself as ‘supreme King of Kings and
Sovereign of the Roman Empire’.[iii]Numerous preachers and
commentators speculated on whether Napoleon was indeed the Antichrist.[iv] Charles Finney, in1835 speculated that
‘If the church will do all her duty, the Millennium may come in this country in
three years.’[v] Joseph Miller narrowed the return of
Christ down to the 21st March 1843, while Charles Russell more
prudently predicted that Christ would set up his spiritual kingdom in the
heavenlies in 1914. For many years, Russell’s popular sermons linking biblical
prophecy with contemporary events were reproduced in over 1,500 newspapers in
the USA and Canada.[vi] This sectarian
speculation came to be embraced by mainstream evangelicalism largely through
the influence of John Nelson Darby and others associated with a series of
prophetic conferences held in England and Ireland from 1826 to 1833.[vii]
John Nelson Darby was a charismatic figure with a dominant
personality. He was a persuasive speaker and zealous missionary for his
conviction that God had a separate plan for the Jewish people apart from the
Church. The churches Darby and his colleagues planted with the seeds of
Premillennial Dispensationalism in turn sent missionaries to Africa, the West
Indies, Australia, New Zealand and, ironically, to work among the Arabs of
Palestine. From 1862 onwards his controlling influence over the Brethren in
Britain waned Darby spent more and more time in North America, making seven
long sea journeys in the next twenty years. During these visits, he came to
have an increasing influence over evangelical leaders. His ideas also helped
shape the emerging evangelical Bible Schools and ‘Prophecy’ conferences, which
came to dominate both Evangelicalism and Fundamentalism in the United States
between 1875 and 1920.[viii] For sake of brevity, I am going
to bypass the role of British politicians and Church leaders in the emergence
of Zionism, relations with the Arab world and most significantly in the Balfour
Declaration. Instead I want to focus on the role of evangelical theology in the
USA.
4. The Rise of Dispensationalism in America
(1859-1945)
5. William Blackstone: Recognition of Zionism
(1841-1935)
William E. Blackstone was an influential evangelist and lay
worker for the Methodist Episcopal Church, as well as a financier and
benefactor. He also became an enthusiastic disciple of J.N. Darby.[xvii] In 1887 he wrote a book on biblical
prophecy entitled Jesus is Coming, which by 1927,
had been translated into thirty-six languages. The book took a premillennial
dispensational view of the Second Coming, emphasizing that the Jews had a
biblical right to Palestine and would soon be restored there. Blackstone became
one of the first Christian Zionists in America to actively lobby for the
Zionist cause. Blackstone took the Zionist movement to be a ‘sign’ of the
imminent return of Christ even though its leadership like Herzl were agnostic.
Blackstone interpreted Scripture in the light of unfolding
contemporary events, something which Charles Spurgeon warned of as ‘exegesis by
current events’.[xviii] No longer were Christian Zionists
expecting Jewish national repentance to precede restoration; it could wait
until after Jesus returned. Although popular with proto-fundamentalists, the
book became more widely known in 1908, when a presentation edition was sent to
several hundred thousand ministers and Christian workers, and again in 1917
when the Moody Bible Institute printed ‘presentation copies’ and sent them to
ministers, missionaries and theological students.[xix] Jesus
is Coming became the
most widely read book on the return of Christ published in the first half of
the 20th Century.[xx]
In March 1891, Blackstone
lobbied the US President, Benjamin Harrison and his Secretary of State, James
G. Blaine with a petition signed by 413 prominent Jewish and Christian leaders
including John and William Rockefeller. The petition called for an
international conference on the restoration of the Jews to Palestine. The
petition, which became known as the Blackstone Memorial, offered this solution:
‘Why not give Palestine back to them [the Jews] again? According
to God’s distribution of nations it is their home, an inalienable possession
from which they were expelled by force…Why shall not the powers which under the
treaty of Berlin, in 1878, gave Bulgaria to the Bulgarians and Servia to the
Servians now give Palestine back to the Jews?’[xxi]
Although President Harrison did not act upon the petition, it
was nevertheless pivotal in galvanising Christian and Jewish Zionist activists
in the United States for the next sixty years. Justice Louis Brandeis, the
first Jewish Justice of the US Supreme Court, who led the Jewish Zionist
movement in the US from 1914, became a close friend of Blackstone and for
twenty years they laboured to convince the American people and in particular,
successive Presidents, to support the Zionist agenda. During that time,
Blackstone sent Brandeis ‘very large sums of money for support of Zionist
work.’[xxii] Responsible for disbursing millions of
dollars of dispensational funds entrusted to him for missionary work,
Blackstone promised Brandeis that if he should not be raptured with Blackstone,
he was to use the funds for the relief of Jews who would come to believe in
Christ and need supporting as missionaries throughout the world during the
millennium.[xxiii]
In 1917, Blackstone was
excited by the developments in Palestine following the defeat of the Turks and
the triumphal entry of the Allies into Jerusalem. In January 1918, he spoke at
a large Jewish Zionist meeting in Los Angeles and declared that he had been
committed to Zionism for 30 years.
‘This is because I believe
that true Zionism is founded on the plan, purpose, and fiat of the everlasting
and omnipotent God, as prophetically recorded in His Holy Word, the Bible.’
During his lifetime, Jewish Zionists honoured Blackstone more
times than any other Christian leader. On one occasion, Brandeis wrote, ‘you
are the Father of Zionism as your work antedates Herzl.’[xxiv] In 1918, Elisha Friedman, Secretary of
the University Zionist Society of New York, similarly declared, ‘A well known
Christian layman, William E. Blackstone, antedated Theodor Herzl by five years
in his advocacy of the re-establishment of a Jewish State.’[xxv] What Blackstone expressed in his
speeches, books and petitions, Cyrus Scofield was to systematise in his
Reference Bible.
6. Cyrus Scofield: The Canonising of Zionism
(1843-1921)
Scofield may be regarded as the most influential exponent of
Dispensationalism, following the publication of his Scofield
Reference Bible by
the Oxford University Press in 1918.[xxvi]
Yet while biographical works on the early Brethren, such as J.
N. Darby and dispensationalists like D. L. Moody abound, Scofield remains an
elusive and enigmatic figure. As a young and largely illiterate
Christian, Scofield was profoundly influenced by J. N. Darby’s writings.
Scofield popularised Darby’s distinction between God’s plan for the Jews apart
from the Church, basing his reference notes on Darby’s own distinctive
translation of the Bible.[xxvii] The combination of an attractive
format, illustrative notes, and cross references has led both critics and
advocates to acknowledge Scofield’s Bible to have been the most influential
book among evangelicals during the first half of the 20thcentury.[xxviii] Craig Blaising, professor of
Systematic Theology at Dallas Theological Seminary acknowledges, ‘The Scofield
Reference Bible became the Bible of Fundamentalism, and
the theology of the notes approached confessional status in many Bible schools,
institutes and seminaries established in the early decades of this Century.’[xxix] Sandeen observes, ‘The book has thus
been subtly but powerfully influential in spreading those views among hundreds
of thousands who have regularly read that Bible and who often have been unaware
of the distinction between the ancient text and the Scofield interpretation.’[xxx]
Scofield’s influence extended well beyond his published
writings. In the 1890s during Scofield’s pastorate in Dallas he was also head
of the Southwestern School of the Bible, the forerunner to Dallas Theological
Seminary, which became Dispensationalism’s ‘most scholarly institution’.[xxxi] The Seminary was founded in 1924 by
one of Scofield’s disciples, Lewis Sperry Chafer, who in turn became Scofield’s
most influential exponent.
7. Arno C. Gaebelein: The Protocols of the
Elders of Zion
Arno Gaebelein is probably the most complex and controversial of
the early dispensationalists, principally for his views on prophecy, the Jews
and Zionism. Gaebelein is distinguished for being the source of the prophetic
notes in Scofield’s Reference Bible.[xxxii] He was also a regular speaker at the
Niagara Prophecy Conferences, and lectured at Dallas Theological Seminary.[xxxiii] In 1893, Gaebelein began publishing a
periodical in Yiddish, Tiqweth Israel – The Hope of Israel Monthly.
A year later Stroeter came to work with him and edited an English version
called Our Hope which
was for Christians. The specific purpose of this periodical was to acquaint
them with the Zionist movement and proclaim the imminent return of Christ.[xxxiv] Gaebelein’s prophetic interpretations,
for example, led him to deduce that NATO was to become the ten kings of the
revived Roman Empire.[xxxv]
Gaebelein has also at times been accused of anti-Semitism.[xxxvi] For example, in response to the
publication of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a
spurious work alleging to be the secret plans of a worldwide Jewish conspiracy
to undermine civil authority, destroy Christianity and take over the
international economy, Gaebelein wrote:
‘… they certainly laid out a path for the revolutionary Jews
that has been strictly and literally followed. That the Jew has been a
prominent factor in the revolutionary movements of the day, wherever they may
have occurred, cannot truthfully be denied, any more than that it was a Jew who
assassinated, with all his family, the former Autocrat of all the Russians; or
than that a very large majority (said to be over 80%) of the present Bolshevist
government in Moscow, are Jews: while along other lines, in the assembly of the
League of Nations, the Jew’s voice is heard, and it is by no means a plaintive,
timid, or uninfluential one—the Jew is the coming man!’[xxxvii]
Two months later Gaebelein wrote about the ‘Jewish Leadership in
Russia.’ claiming that forty-four out of fifty of the Bolshevik leaders were of
Jewish origin. Weber describes this apparent contradiction as ‘ironic
ambivalence’, suggesting that premillennial prophetic views like those of
Gaebelein, ‘enabled them to give credence to the Protocols (and
thereby sound anti-Semitic) even though they had been and remained staunch
opponents of anti-Semitism.’[xxxviii] Gaebelein clearly had no illusions as
to the origin or motives of the Zionist movement, which he regarded as
‘apostate’, yet he could also write about, ‘the return of the Jews to Palestine
in unbelief is before us in modern Zionism, therefore it is the most startling
sign of all the signs of our times.’ [xxxix] In the pages of Our
Hope[xl]Gaebelein frequently reported
with enthusiasm the development of the various Zionist colonization societies
in Palestine, supported the efforts of Herzl and informed a still largely
ignorant and complacent American Christian community how prophecy was indeed
being fulfilled in Palestine. Although dispensationalists in the early 20th Century
continued to see in such events as the rise of communism, the Balfour
Declaration and rise of anti-Semitism, evidence of the imminent return of
Christ, there was a gradual decline in the ‘intellectual prestige of
Fundamentalism.’[xli]
8. Anti-Semitism and American Liberal
Christian Zionism (1918-1967)
In the period from 1918 right up to 1948, increasingly secular
arguments were made for the Zionist cause, with a ‘decreasing use of explicitly
theological vocabulary.’[xlii] American foreign policy was
increasingly determined by the need to maintain good relations with the
strategic oil-rich Arab nations at the very same time America was engaged in a
race to prevent Soviet hegemony. As the American political establishment began
to show less enthusiasm for Blackstone’s Memorial, the Jewish Zionist movement
discovered more influential friends among liberal church leaders who had
greater leverage with the Presidency and were more interested in Jewish rights
than converting them and fulfilling prophecy. Naim Ateek observes,
As the British Empire
waned, the Zionist state cleverly and shrewdly connected itself with the rising
American Empire and gradually was able to occupy strategic positions within all
of its governing branches – the Congress, Pentagon, State Department, and the
White House.
In the early 20th Century, following the devastating
toll of the First World War and then the Great Depression, Fundamentalism in
America became more and more preoccupied with refuting liberal theology, the
social gospel and Darwinian evolution than with prophetic speculation. In a
detailed history of the rise of 20th Century American Fundamentalism prior
to 1970, Erling Jorstad traces the rise of the Christian right with its
anti-Communist and xenophobic agenda, yet without a single reference to Israel.[xliii]
Similarly, in George Marsden’s historical overview of the rise
of Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism in America, he observes that despite some
evidence of anti-Semitism, in the early 20th Century there seemed little interest
in contemporary Israel among conservative evangelicals.[xliv] Others such as David Rausch have
traced in more detail the rise of anti-Semitism within early 20th century
Christian Fundamentalism.[xlv]
For example, in 1919, aware that the British and French were
undermining his goal of self-determination in Syria, Woodrow Wilson sent
Charles Crane, a wealthy American Arabist as head of the King-Crane Commission
to investigate the wishes of the indigenous people. Reservations expressed by
Arab leaders and expatriate Americans led Crane’s Commission to recommend the
abandonment of American support for a Jewish homeland, that further Jewish
immigration be severely restricted and America or Britain govern Palestine.
While Crane went on to help finance the first explorations for oil in Saudi
Arabia and the Yemen, his admiration for Hitler’s Germany ‘the real political
bulwark of Christian culture’, and of Stalin’s anti-Jewish purges in Soviet
Russia, led his biographer to describe his later life as dominated by, ‘a most
pronounced prejudice … [and] … unbridled dislike of Jews.’ Crane tried to
persuade President Franklin D. Roosevelt to shun the counsels of Felix
Frankfurter and to avoid appointing other Jews to government posts. Crane
‘envisioned a world-wide attempt on the part of the Jews to stamp out all
religious life and felt that only a coalition of Muslims and Roman Catholics
would be strong enough to defeat such designs.’ In 1933, he even proposed to
Haj Amin Husseini, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, that the Mufti open talks with
the Vatican to plan an anti-Jewish campaign.[xlvi]The
reasoning behind opposition by American missionaries to the founding of the
State of Israel is a complex one. In 1948, weeks before the State of Israel was
declared, Bayard Dodge who had founded the American University in Beirut,
retired to Princeton in New Jersey. In April 1948, he wrote a watershed article
in The Readers Digest entitled,
‘Must There Be War in the Middle East?’ Kaplan describes it as the ‘definitive
statement’ of American Arabists on the birth of the State of Israel.
‘Though he cautioned, “Not all Jews are Zionist and not all
Zionists are extremists”, for Dodge the Zionist movement was a tragedy of which
little good could come… Dodge’s argument against Zionism rests, not on the
politics of the movement, but on the Arabs’ opposition to it, which in Dodge’s
view made the Zionist program unrealistic and therefore dangerous. Years and
decades of strife would, Dodge knew, follow the birth of the Jewish State. As a
result, wrote Dodge, “All the work done by our philanthropic non-profit
American agencies in the Arab world – our Near East Foundation, our missions,
our YMCA and YWCA, our Boston Jesuit college in Baghdad, our colleges in Cairo,
Beirut, Damascus – would be threatened with complete frustration and collapse …
so would our oil concessions”, a scenario that Dodge said would help Communist
Russia. Dodge then quoted a fellow “American Middle East expert” as saying that
“they [the Russians] intend to get many thousands of Russian Communist Jews
into the Palestinian Jewish State.”’[xlvii]
Kaplan argues that Dodge’s
views were representative of the wider expatriate and missionary community who
believed the US, British and Russians morally and politically wrong to railroad
the partition of Palestine through the United Nations.
Richard Crossman who was a member of the Anglo-American team
investigating the Palestine crisis in 1947, observed that the American
Protestant missionaries, ‘challenged the Zionist case with all the arguments of
the most violently pro-Arab British Middle Eastern officials.’[xlviii] Kaplan concludes, ‘the American
community in Lebanon was almost, to a man, psychologically opposed to the State
of Israel.’[xlix]
In his memoirs, Harry Truman also
claims his post-war State Department specialists were opposed to the idea of a
Jewish State because they either wanted to appease the Arabs or because they
were anti-Semitic.[l] During the 1930s and
1940s, both prior to and after the founding of the State of Israel, the
principal allies of Zionism were liberal Protestant Christians such as Paul
Tillich, William F. Albright and Reinhold Niebuhr who founded the Christian
Council on Palestine in 1942.[li] Niebuhr, who was Professor of Social
Ethics at Union Theological Seminary, defended his Zionism on pragmatic rather
than religious grounds. Jewish persecution in Europe combined with restrictive
immigration laws in America led Niebuhr to recognise the ‘moral right’ of the
Jews to Palestine in order for them to survive as a nation.[lii] In 1946, he testified before the
Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry in Washington on behalf of the Christian
Council on Palestine. While acknowledging the conflicting rights of Arabs and
Jews in Palestine, he argued:
‘The fact however that the Arabs have a vast hinterland in the
Middle East, and the fact that the Jews have nowhere to go, establishes the
relative justice of their claims and of their cause … Arab sovereignty over a
portion of the debated territory must undoubtedly be sacrificed for the sake of
establishing a world Jewish homeland.’[liii]
In 1958, by which time he
was at odds with most other liberal Protestant leaders, Niebuhr continued to
insist on a wider definition of Christian Zionism. In, ‘The Relation of
Christians and Jews in Western Civilization’ he wrote,
‘Many Christians are pro-Zionist in the sense that they believe
that a homeless people require a homeland; but we feel as embarrassed as
anti-Zionist religious Jews when messianic claims are used to substantiate the
right of the Jews to the particular homeland in Palestine.’[liv]
Apart from wishing to see
Arabs ‘compensated’, Niebuhr did not appear to support the view that
Palestinians also ‘require a homeland’.
9. The Rebirth of American Evangelical
Christian Zionism.
For Evangelicals, the founding of the State of Israel in 1948
came to be seen as the most significant fulfilment of biblical prophecy,[lv] and ‘the greatest piece of prophetic
news that we have had in the 20th Century.’[lvi] The 1967 ‘Six Day War’ marked a
further significant watershed for evangelical Christian interest in Israel and
Zionism. Billy Graham’s father-in-law Nelson Bell, then editor of Christianity
Today, expressed the
sentiments of many 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.’[lvii]
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.[lviii] 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.’[lix]
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. His election:
‘…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.’[lx]
‘White House Seminars’ became a regular feature of Reagan’s
administration bringing leading Christian Zionists like Jerry Falwell, Mike
Evans and Hal Lindsey into direct personal contact with national and
Congressional leaders. In 1982, Reagan invited Falwell to give a briefing to
the National Security Council on the possibility of a nuclear war with Russia.[lxi] In a personal conversation reported in
the Washington Post in
April 1984, Reagan shared his 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.’[lxii]
While subsequent Presidents have not 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.[lxiii]
10. The Significance of Contemporary Christian
Zionism
Like Elisha, Pastor John Hagee appears to have assumed the
mantle of Jerry Falwell who died in 2007. Hagee is the Founder and Senior
Pastor of Cornerstone Church, an 19,000 member evangelical church in San
Antonio in Texas. He is also CEO of Global Evangelism Television which
broadcasts his programmes on 160 T.V. stations, 50 radio stations and eight
networks into an estimated 99 million homes
in 200 countries worldwide
on a weekly basis. In 2006 he founded Christians
United for Israel with
the support of 400 other Christian leaders. Last year he admitted:
“For 25 almost 26 years now, I have been pounding the
evangelical community over television. The bible is a very pro-Israel book. If
a Christian admits “I believe the Bible,” I can make him a pro-Israel supporter
or they will have to denounce their faith. So I have the Christians over a
barrel, you might say.”[lxiv]
The assumption Hagee makes,
that Bible-believing Christians will be pro-Israel, is now the dominant view
among contemporary evangelicals. In March 2007, Hagee was a guest speaker at
the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) Policy Conference. He
began with these words:
“The sleeping giant of
Christian Zionism has awakened. There are 50 million Christians standing up and
applauding the State of Israel…”
As the Jerusalem Post
pointed out, his speech did not lack clarity. He went on to warn:
“It is 1938. Iran is Germany, and Ahmadinejad is the new Hitler.
We must stop Iran’s nuclear threat and stand boldly with Israel, the only
democracy in the Middle East… Think of our potential future together: 50
million evangelicals joining in common cause with 5 million Jewish people in
America on behalf of Israel is a match made in heaven.”[lxv]
At the July 19th, 2006
Washington DC inaugural event for Christians United for Israel, after recorded
greeting from George W. Bush, and in the presence of four US Senators as well
as the Israeli ambassador to the US, Hagee stated :
”The United States must join Israel in a pre-emptive military
strike against Iran to fulfill God’s plan for both Israel and the West… a
biblically prophesied end-time confrontation with Iran, which will lead to the
Rapture, Tribulation, and Second Coming of Christ.”[lxvi]
Are we therefore surprised when Muslims wrongly assume that such
views reflect Christianity as a whole? So how significant is this
movement in America? The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life estimates there are 20-40 million Christian
Zionists in America.The Unity Coalition for Israel draws together over 200 different
organizations and claims 40 million active members. Other influential Christian
Zionist organisations include the International Christian Embassy, Jerusalem
(ICEJ), Bridges for Peace (BFP) and Christian Friends of Israel (CFI. Together
with Christians United for Israel (CUFI) and the Unity Coalition for Israel
(UCI), these organisations make up a broad coalition which is shaping not only
the Christian Zionist agenda but also influencing US foreign policy in the
Middle East today. Their political agenda is multifaceted. They are actively engaged
in:
§ Lobbying
the White House and Congress on behalf of Israel.
§ Funding
the emigration of Russian Jews to Israel through organisations such as Exobus
and ICEJ.
§ Twinning
evangelical churches with illegal Jewish settlements through organisations like
Christian Friends of Israeli Communities (COIFC).
§ Campaigning
to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem to ensure it is recognised as
the exclusive, undivided eternal capital of the Jewish people.
§ Denigrating
the democratically elected Palestinian leadership and thwarting their
aspirations to statehood.
§ Vilifying
pro-justice Christian leaders who challenge Zionism and demonising peace and
justice networks and NGOs within the mainline churches.
11. Conclusions: The Way Forward
Is there any sign that the
re-election of President Barak Obama on Tuesday will result in any change in US
Middle East policy or will we simply try harder to impose our definition of
peace and our version of democracy? Bacevich observes that our mistake is in,
“viewing history as
ultimately a good-news story. If the good news appears mingled with bad, the
imperative of the faithful is to try harder. Forget about Baghdad and Kabul:
onward to Damascus and Tehran.”
Naim Ateek insists, there is no such thing as “benevolent
empire”.[lxvii] Because of the special relationship,
Israel has become an integral part of the American Empire. The economic,
military and political bonds are so intertwined they are unbreakable,
regardless of whether the Democratic or Republican party are in power. It is
therefore impossible at present for the US to be an honest broker in the peace
process. Are we therefore surprised at the violence and antipathy
directed toward the United States in the Middle East? Secretary Clinton rightly
observed that Ambassador Stevens along with other US diplomats, put their lives
at risk “because they believe that the United States must be a force for peace
and progress.” Bacevich asks,
“But in the face of decade
upon decade of contrary experience, what could possibly convince Libyans or
Egyptians, Iraqis or Iranians, Afghans or Pakistanis that such faith in
America’s idealism has any basis in fact?… The United States has aligned itself
all too often with the forces of despotism and oppression… And this tendency
has persisted even on Secretary Clinton’s watch; just look at the response to
the Arab Awakening’s appearance in Bahrain.”
He concludes with a
challenge that we must take seriously if we are to avoid being held
responsible, for the extinction of the indigenous Christian community right
across the Middle East.
“If we Americans think we have something to teach others, lets
do it as exemplars – that is, assuming we are willing to close the yawning gap
between the values we loudly profess and the way we actually behave.”[lxviii]
Surely this must be our
primary task if we as Evangelicals are ever to have a significant impact in the
Middle East again for the sake of the gospel and the extension of Christ’s
kingdom.
© Stephen Sizer
2 November 2012
[i] Andrew Bacevich,
‘How it Happened’ Newsweek, 24 September 2012,
pp.25-27.
[ii] A small number of
19th Century
Postmillennial theologians did continue to espouse a form of Jewish
Restorationism but only as a consequence of Jewish people coming to faith in
Jesus and being incorporated within the Church. These include Charles Simeon
(1759-1836) and David Brown (1803-1897), who was Edward Irving’s assistant at
Regent Square and who wrote The Second Advent (1849)
and The Restoration of Israel,
(1861). Erroll Hulse also identifies with this position, The Restoration of Israel,
(Worthing, Henry Walter, 1968). Since the Restorationist movement became
dominated by Covenant premillennialists and dispensationalists from the early
19th Century,
this thesis has concentrated on their contribution. The previous chapter has
explored the early intimations of proto-Christian Zionism within the
Reformation and Puritan period which was dominated by Postmillennialists. See
Arnold Fruchtenbaum, Israelology, The Missing Link in Systematic Theology,
(Tustin, California, Ariel Ministries, 1989), pp14-122.
[iii] G. H. Pember, The Great Prophecies of the
Centuries concerning Israel and the Gentiles, (London, Hodder,
1902), pp236-241.
[iv] J. N. Darby,
‘Remarks on a tract circulated by the Irvingites’, Collected Writings,edited
by William Kelly (Kingston on Thames, Stow Hill Bible and Trust Depot, 1962),
Doctrinal. IV, 15, p2; Andrew Drummond, Edward Irving and His Circle (London, James Clarke, n.d.), p132;
Janet M. Hartley, ‘Napoleon in Russia: Saviour or anti-Christ? History Today, 41 (1991); Richard Kyle, The Last Days are Here Again,
(Grand Rapids, Michigan, Baker, 1998), p71.
[v] Charles Finney, Lectures on Revival,
(Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1960), p306.
[vi] Clouse, Hosack &
Pierard, op.cit., p116.
[vii] Rowland A. Davenport, Albury Apostles,
(London, Free Society, 1970).
[viii]
Wagner, op.cit., p. 89.
[ix] Timothy L. Smith,
‘Righteousness and Hope: Christian Holiness and the Millennial Vision in
America, 1800-1900,’ American Quarterly, 31.1 (Spring 1979).
[x] Richard Kyle, The Last Days are Here Again,
(Grand Rapids, Michigan, Baker, 1998), pp77-98.
[xi] Ibid. p81.
[xii] Charles Caldwell Ryrie, Dispensationalism Today,
(Chicago, Moody Press, 1966).
[xiii] Ernest R. Sandeen, The Roots of Fundamentalism:
British and American Millenarianism, 1800-1930, (Chicago, The
University of Chicago Press, 1970); Reuben Archer Torrey, The Fundamental Doctrines of
the Christian Faith, (New York, Doren, 1918); The Fundamentals: A Testimony
to the Truth, (Chicago, Testimony Publishing Co., 1910-1915).
[xiv] Kyle, op.cit., p104.
[xv] David Rausch, Zionism within Early American
Fundamentalism 1878-1918, a Convergence of Two Traditions, (New
York, Edwin Mellen, 1979), p2.
[xvi]
Wagner, op.cit., p89.
[xvii]
Beth M. Lindberg, A God-Filled Life: The Story of William E. Blackstone,
(Chicago The American Messianic Fellowship, n.d.).
[xviii] Charles H. Spurgeon, Lectures to My Students,
(London, Passmore & Alabaster, 1893), p100.
[xix]
Rennie, op.cit., p48; Rausch, op.cit., p264.
[xx] W. M. Smith, ‘Signs of the Times’, Moody Monthly,
August (1966), p5; Tim LaHaye & Jerry B. Jenkins, Left Behind,
(Wheaton, Tyndale House, 1995); Tribulation Force, (Wheaton, Tyndale House, 1996); Nicolae, (Wheaton,
Tyndale House, 1997); Soul Harvest, (Wheaton, Tyndale House, 1998); Apollyon, (Wheaton, Tyndale House, 1999); Assassins,(Wheaton,
Tyndale House, 1999); The Indwelling, (Wheaton, Tyndale House, 2000); The Mark, (Wheaton,
Tyndale House, 2001): Desecration,
(Wheaton, Tyndale House, 2002):The Remnant,
(Wheaton, Tyndale House, 2002). Sales of the Left Behind series now exceed 32
million copies. See Nancy Gibbs, ‘Apocalypse Now’ Time, 1 July 2002,
p45. Hal Lindsey’s Late Great Planet Earth (London, Lakeland, 1970) has reputedly
sold over 18 million copies in English.
[xxi]
Reuben Fink, America and Palestine, (New York, American Zionist Emergency
Council, 1945), pp20-21, cited in Sharif, op.cit., p92.
[xxii] Merkley, op.cit., p92.
[xxiii] Ibid.
[xxiv] Currie,
op.cit.
[xxv] Cutler B. Whitwell,
‘The Life Story of W.E.B. – and of “Jesus is coming’”, The Sunday School Times, January 11, (1936), p19, cited in
Rausch, op.cit., p265.
[xxvi] C. I. Scofield, The Scofield Reference Bible, (New York, Oxford University Press,
1917); The New
Scofield Reference Bible, edited
by E. Schuyler English (New York, Oxford University Press, 1967); The Ryrie Study Bible Expanded Edition, (Chicago,
Moody Bible Institute, 1994); The New Scofield Study Bible, (New York, Oxford
University Press, 1984); Scofield Study Notes, (QuickVerse, Parsons Technology,
1994).
[xxvii]
Bass, op.cit., p18. See also Loraine Boettner, The Millennium, (Grand Rapids, Baker, 1958), p369.
[xxviii]
Dwight Wilson, Armageddon Now!, (Grand Rapids, Michigan, Baker Book
House, 1977), p15; Sandeen, op.cit., p222.
[xxix] Craig A. Blaising ‘Dispensationalism,
The Search for Definition’ in Dispensationalism, Israel and the Church, The Search for
Definition, edited by
Craig A. Blaising & Darrell L. Bock (Grand Rapids, Michigan,
Zondervan, 1992), p21.
[xxx]
Sandeen, op.cit., p222.
[xxxi] Gerstner, op.cit., p46.
[xxxii] Arno C. Gaebelein, The Conflict of the Ages,
(Grand Rapids, Zondervan, 1966).
[xxxiii] Rausch, op.cit.,
p261.
[xxxiv] Rausch, op.cit.,
p292.
[xxxv] Our Hope, 55 (1948-49) p673, cited in Kyle,
op.cit., p128.
[xxxvi] Timothy P. Weber, Living in the Shadow of the
Second Coming, (New York, Oxford, 1979), p154.
[xxxvii] Arno C. Gaebelein in Our Hope, 27
(April 1921) p601, quoted by Rausch in theJournal of the Evangelical
Theological Society. 23/2 (1980) p108.
[xxxviii] Timothy P. Weber,
‘A Reply To David Rausch’s “Fundamentalism and the Jew”’Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, 24/1
March (1981) pp68-77.
[xxxix] ‘The Fourth Zionistic
Congress: The Most Striking Sign of Our Times’, Our Hope, 6,
September (1900). p72, cited in Rausch, op.cit., p247.
[xl] Rausch claims this
periodical had a unique and formative ministry within the Proto-Fundamentalist
movement. See Rausch, op.cit., p225.
[xli] Merkley, op.cit.,
p72-74.
[xlii] Ibid., p114.
[xliii]
Erling Jorstad, The Politics of Doomsday, Fundamentalists of the Far Right,(Nashville,
Abingdom, 1970).
[xliv]
George Marsden, Fundamentalism and American Culture, The Shaping of Twentieth
Century Evangelicalism 1870-1925, (New York, Oxford University
Press, 1980).
[xlv] For a detailed analysis of how
Christian teaching has shaped American attitudes toward the Jews see, Charles
Y. Glock and Rodney Stark, Christian Beliefs and Anti-Semitism, (New York, Harper
& Row, 1966); David A. Rausch, Fundamentalists, Evangelicals and Anti-Semitism,
(Valley Forge, Trinity Press International, 1993).
[xlvi]
Robert Kaplan, The Arabists, The Romance of an American Elite, (New
York, The Free Press, 1993), p71.
[xlvii] Ibid., p80.
[xlviii] Ibid., p81.
[xlix] Ibid., p185.
[l] Ibid., p185.
[li] Merkley, op.cit.,
pp141-145.
[lii]
Reinhold Niebuhr, The Nation, 21 February (1942), pp214-216 and 28
February (1942), pp253-255, cited in Sharif, op.cit., p113.
[liii]
US Department of State, ‘Hearings of the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry’,
14 January (1946), p147. Cited in Sharif, op.cit., p113.
[liv] Reinhold Niebuhr, Pious and Secular America,
(New York, Scribner’s, 1958), pp86-112, cited in Merkley, op.cit., p141.
[lv] 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.
[lvi] Louis T. Talbot &
William W. Orr, The Nation of Israel and the Word of God!, (Los
Angeles, Bible Institute of Los Angeles, 1948), p8.
[lvii]
Donald Wagner, ‘Evangelicals and Israel: Theological Roots of a Political
Alliance’ The Christian Century, November 4, (1998), pp1020-1026.
[lviii]
Jimmy Carter, The Blood of Abraham, (London, Sidgwick & Jackson,
1985).
[lix]
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.
[lx]
Donald Wagner, ‘Beyond Armageddon’, The Link, New York: Americans for Middle East
Understanding; October-November, (1992), p5.
[lxi] Halsell, Prophecy., op.cit.,
p47
[lxii]
Ronnie Dugger, ‘Does Reagan Expect a Nuclear Armageddon?’ Washington Post, 18
April (1984).
[lxiii] George Bush, Speech to the American
Jewish Committee, May 3, (2001),http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/US-Israel/presquote.html
[lxiv] John Hagee, The One Jerusalem
Blog, 25 January 2007.http://www.onejerusalem.org/blog/archives/2007/01/audio_exclusive_12.asp<Accessed
March 2007>
[lxv] “Christians for Israel” Editorial, The
Jerusalem Post, 14 March 2007.http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1173879085796&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull <Accessed March 2007>
[lxvi]
http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2008/02/28/19911/hagee-mccain-endorsement
[lxvii] Naim Ateek, ‘Who
commands our allegiance, God or Caesar?’ Cornerstone, Issue 59, Winter
2010/2011.
[lxviii] Bacevich, op.cit.
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I am thankful to you, Joe Ortiz, for airing British church leader Stephen Sizer's magnificent and hard-hitting article "Evangelicals for Middle East Understanding." And I am glad that the Rev. Dr. Sizer focuses on troublemakers like American pastor John Hagee who has brainwashed hundreds of pastors into becoming mindless robot/supporters of the policies of Israel which shamelessly and two-facedly backstabs its evangelical friends as much as it savagely isolates and persecutes its Palestinian neighbors! If Hagee (himself brainwashed by the historically recent and utterly unscriptural pretribulation rapture theory) truly loves Israel and Jewish persons as much as he says he does, why does he want to be pretrib-raptured up to heaven to feast with "Israel's Messiah" instead of wanting to stay on earth to minister love to Jews enduring what Hagee views as the future time of "Jacob's trouble"? The dispensationalism espoused by Hagee and other parrots like him is not only self-centered but has a 19th century foundation that is in truth anti-Jewish, as has been brought out in recent studies on that system's beginnings! (Google "Roots of Warlike Christian Zionism" for evidence of this.) So we see on the world scene two self-centered entities: pretrib rapture dispensationalists and the state of Israel - and it isn't hard to imagine that they will continue to walk hand in hand until they fall off some future cliff together!
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Every time I run across your blog I find information that I can never find anywhere else. The Lord is truly using you for His glory. Every Christian on earth should be reading your blog if they aren't already. Blessings, Jim
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