Christians Standing
with Israel
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Keywords: Christian Zionism *
Israel divestment * Israeli boycott * Presbyterian Church USA * Replacement
Theology * Israel
Christian Zionism and the Church
Israeli Divestment and Israeli Boycott
Anti-Israel Agenda Spearheaded by Presbyterian Church USA
In previous articles, we have provided extensive,
Scriptural support that not only identifies God's Covenant with
Abraham as "everlasting" and "irrevocable", it entirely solidifies
is as such. To advance any other doctrine outside of and
contrary to the Word of God is to place oneself in diametric
opposition to it.
The following article provides and in depth
examination of the common viewpoints on behalf of mainstream
churches regarding
Christian Zionism and Israel.
As the reader will soon discover, many of the more common, mainline
Christian denominations in today's Church can hardly be considered
legitimate "friends of Israel". On the contrary, many of these
churches have adopted a firm, pro-Palestinian position and consider
Israel the "occupiers" of "Palestine".
In addition to the presence of a clear and defined anti-Israel
agenda in today's Christian Church, the international
community is becoming increasingly fond of Israeli divestment.
Continually labeling Israel as "an occupation "that must end", it
was the Presbyterian Church (USA) who stepped up as "point man"
during the initial divestment campaigns in 2004. While many of the
denominational decisions regarding Israeli divestment and boycotts
have been either reversed or "modified", the opposition continues to
propagate its anti-Israel decisions, albeit to a varying degree.
The following article was
borrowed from
Israpundit, and represents an extremely
insightful examination of the Church's relentless pursuit of it's
anti-Israel agenda. The Christian Zionist ministry of
Christians Standing with Israel
neither accepts nor claims credit for its authorship. The following
information appears here for educational purposes only.
*************************************************************
IT IS ABOUT ISRAEL'S
RIGHT-TO-LIFE, by Prof Paul C Merkley
THE PRESENT CAMPAIGN OF THE CHURCHES IS NOT ABOUT THE WALL NOR
ABOUT DIVESTMENT: IT IS ABOUT ISRAEL'S RIGHT-TO-LIFE.
At annual conventions of several of the major Christian
denominations in the North America, Britain and Europe held
during these last few months, statements have been written into
the record calling upon Israel to dismantle her security barrier
and declarations have been passed of intent to divest the
denominations pension fund portfolios of investments in Israeli
firms and other firms doing business with Israel.
Behind these many ostensibly disparate decisions is a
well-organized campaign of contempt against Israel. In these
past few weeks, and with these actions, the leadership of the
major denominations has taken a coordinated step beyond
hostility to a nation with a right to defend her good name to
active engagement in the campaign to foreclose her
right-to-life.
The present campaign first came to the surface with announcement
by the Presbyterian Church (USA) at its General Assembly in
July, 2004 of its intention "to have its Board of Pensions
divest itself of investments in companies receiving one million
dollars or more in profits per year from investments in Israel
or that have invested more than one million dollars or more in
Israel." Some truly prize-winning double talk was expended on
that occasion by the Stated Clerk of the denomination in the
effort to explain that this was really not as provocative as it
sounded --that the divestment would be phased and selective, "unfolding by stages“ as if that made a moral difference. In
justification of its decision, the Presbyterians offered an
efficient summation of the last half-century of history: "The
occupation" has proven to be at the root of the evil acts
committed against innocent people on both sides. Solution:"The
occupation must end."
The Presbyterian Assembly (USA) is one of those denominations
which our alert, group-thinking journalists still refer to as
"mainstream" because they commanded the support of a majority of
American Protestants half a century ago! Like the other
"mainstreamers", the Presbyterians have suffered a steady
decline in membership in our lifetime. The Presbyterian Church
(USA), for example, had 5 million members in the 1920s (which
made it the fifth-largest denomination, when the population of
the United States was just over 100 million; it has around 3
million today which makes it the tenth largest denomination
when the population is around 300 million.) There are no doubt
many reasons for this, but the one that screams out is that the
leaders of these mainstream Protestant denominations have
pursued courses of policy which do not have the support of their
congregations. They have, in other words, succumbed to elitism:
the leaders simply take their positions on public issues from
academics in the universities and from the media elites,
ignoring the views of their own parishioners.
For a while it seemed that there was sufficient unhappiness
about this proposal of the Presbyterian leaders that it would be
withdrawn quietly after a decent interval. Apart from everything
else, divestment of healthy stocks at work in the ever-growing
Israeli economy, could not be considered good financial
stewardship -- especially since these very same denominations
are losing members weekly (for quite other reasons, having to do
with theology and moral philosophy) and consequently are
suffering decline of the cash-flow upon which present salaries,
not to mention future pensions, will depend. In the Universities
(where they have Mathematics and Accounting Departments) the
divestment mania crested and then declined, just about the time
that the Churches got on board.
But just since the beginning of this year the campaign has come
back. This very month (August 2005) the Presbyterian Church
(USA) announces that it will insist that four companies that it
considers helpful to Israel in its occupation of Palestine stop
doing business with Israel: millions of dollars of Church
pension funds are said to be at stake. And now the United Church
of Christ (USA) and the Episcopal Church (USA) have recently
voted to consider actions along the same lines. These actions
follow a declaration from the World Council of Churches (WCC) in
February urging all member bodies to consider taking such
actions. The Anglican Consultative Council, headed by the
Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Willams, voted unanimously in
favour of divestment from Israel at their meeting in England
June, 2005.
Episcopal Bishop Thomas Shaw of Massachusetts, who considers
himself a supporter of Palestinian rights, has warned against
these actions, on the ground that �€œthe
economics of Israel and Palestine are so closely intertwined
that divestment is actually counterproductive for the
"Palestinian people". In the same vein,
a group of Episcopal Bishops in New York, led by Bishop Mark S.
Sisk, recently held a attended a press conference together with
Rabbi Joseph Ptasnik, Executive Vice-President of the NY board
of Rabbis, to express opposition to plan.
I have not dealt separately with the simultaneous campaign to
compel Israel (through UN action) to dismantle her security
wall. The two campaigns (dis and div) are different faces of the
same project which is to expose Israel to enemies whose
weapons of choice, including recruitment of children as
suicide-bombers, are exempted from criticism by the WCC and the
many NGOs because they are considered the desperate feeble
instruments of the disadvantaged. It is important, however, to
recognize the manipulation involved in these two inter-locking
campaigns.
Introduction of these resolutions is always preceded by the
claim that the attention of these unbiased and nonpolitical
theologians has been drawn to these far-off issues by the
workings of conscience. The denominational leaders who present
themselves at their conventions as spokesmen for the Palestinian
people inevitably have just returned from an all-expense-paid
tour of the Palestinian churches a tour which never includes
briefing by Israeli political or military sources or (God
forbid!) friendly visits to the pro-Zionist Christian
organizations active in Jerusalem. The presenters at the
conventions always speak of the sudden clarification of the
moral issue which came upon them in the course of these
intensive five-or-ten day tours to the front. (Doesn't anyone
remember the tours of the Vietnamese front by politicians in the
1960s?)
As soon as the opening speeches are made and the documents are
introduced for discussion, a highly-effective cabal of despisers
of Israel is already in place at the microphones as questions
are now called from the floor. When a historian of the Twentieth
Century reads the transcripts of the discussion taking place at
these denominational conventions, he is reminded of the days of
the Popular Front (the1930s), of those many emotion-charged
conventions of the self-declared Friends of Peace where
well-rehearsed single-issue zealots -- a small rudder directing
a huge seagoing vessel --carried an agreed strategy to the floor
while the rest of the delegates floated about asking each other
what the issues were.
The full-time fomenters of this anti-Israel campaign are mainly
associated with certain of the NGOs whose leadership is drawn in
large part from Christian Arabs. Funding for these many NGOs
comes from church groups in Europe and North America.
Spearheading these efforts is the organization called Sabeel
Liberation Theology Centre, Jerusalem, whose full-time director
is the Rev. Naim Ateek, once Canon of St George's Anglican
Cathedral in Jerusalem. Canon Ateek travels constantly. When I
was researching my books and living in Jerusalem I tried
repeatedly to secure interviews with him, but he has always
either too busy or out-of-town -- in Cyprus, in Europe, in North
America. Needless to say, costs of Canon Ateek's heroic non-stop
travels do not come out of Palestinian coffers but out of
budgets of WCC and denominations who provide the settings for
his anti-Israel conferences.
No pro-Israel speaker gets anywhere near the platform at a
Friends of Sabeel Conference. I have proffered my credentials as
a published academic scholar on the History of Zionism and of
Christian attitudes towards Israel and have either been ignored,
without the courtesy of acknowledgement, or given the stick-in-
the-eye that the program is already filled, but thanks so much
for your interest. I have undergone this humiliation locally,
when the Anglican Church of Canada has sponsored its Friends of
Sabeel meetings here in my home city of Ottawa.
Part of the problem is that nobody in the hierarchy of the
denominations ever reads a book. The busy, always-traveling,
always-at-meetings, always-talking leaders of the denominations
do not seem to grasp the concept of a book as an extended
argument, with sources and facts and ideas. For these
technocrats, everything comes from brochures and goes directly
into binders. In this company, pamphleteering is the beginning
and the end of everything, scholarship counts for nothing.
Because they are not interested in books of history, they are
not exposed to the complexities. Their repertoire comes from
headlines, one-liners and slogans.
As for my own denomination, the Evangelical Lutheran Church,
their bookstore promotes a single, doggedly pro-Palestinian
booklet: Ann E. Hafften, Water From the Rock: Lutheran Voices
from Palestine. Minneapolis. Augsburg Fortress. 2003. 94 pages.
I have tried repeatedly, as have other others, to get this
author and her publishers to acknowledge correspondence. (My
unsolicited critical review of her pamphlet will be noted in the
next edition of the Guinness Book of World Records as the
literary item most often lost in the mail by a major
ecclesiastical body.) My approaches by telephone to the
Canadian, American and the World Lutheran bodies (involving, in
the latter case, expensive long-distance phone calls) get the
bum's rush.
In this totalitarian ambience, the thought of debate makes no
sense: right-thinking is everything. (Again, the analogy with
the Popular Front will occur.) Efforts of Jewish organizations
to establish dialogue on the effects of these campaigns has
failed utterly. Groups representing the various rabbinical
associations and secular organizations like the Anti-Defamation
League -- groups which had played prominent roles in
Christian-Jewish dialogue over the past two or three decades
have discovered in recent months that they have no credit at all
with the denominational leaders who have become enamored of the
twin issue of divestment and dismantling.
So far, opponents of these actions within the denominations have
been outflanked by the activists. However, there are signs that
Christian laity are taking alarm at the palpable anti-Judaism
(masquerading as anti-Zionism) which has taken hold of the
leadership. Individual voices of protest, or at least of
caution, are being heard regarding official church harangues
against Israel and the Jews which figure in Sabeel and MECC
literature. Notably, there is a fascinating scholarly essay by
Dexter van Zile, formerly Deacon with the Congregation Church in
Massachusetts and now director of the Boston office of The David
Project of the Judeo-Christian Alliance, which explores the
resonance which can be heard between these documents and the
medieval libels that we thought we had all put behind us.[�€œSabeel's
Teachings of Contempt: A Judeo- Christian Report, June, 2005,
which can be obtained via www.davidproject.org ] Van Zile
exposes the "deicide imagery" in Naim Ateek's many essays and
lectures.
As van Zile records, Ateek is especially enamored of the image
of the Israelis as Herod and the mirror image of the
Palestinians as the babes of Bethlehem. I myself have been in
the congregation at St. Andrew's Church of Scotland in Jerusalem
to hear on one occasion a version of this same inflammatory
Herod/babe-in-the-manger sermon at a regular Sunday- morning
service. I regret to this day that I did not have the character
to stand up on a point of privilege, but a lifetime of
conditioning to the solemnity of church service held me down, I
did, however, check his office the next day to request an
interview. They told me he was out of town.)
This scurrilous deicide stuff is not muttered in corners but is
repeated again and again in lectures and printed materials. The
Israeli "occupation," Ateek declaims, is the stone placed on the
entrance of Jesus' tomb. In a sermon of April, 2002, Canon Ateek said: In
this season of Lent, it seems to many of us that Jesus is on the
cross again with thousands of crucified Palestinians around Him.
It only takes people of insight to see the hundred of thousands
of crosses throughout the land, Palestinian men, women, and
children being crucified. Palestine has become one huge
Golgotha. The Israeli government crucifixion system is operating
daily. Palestine has become the place of the skull. What does this lack that it should be considered less
provocative than the sermons that sent the medieval mobs on
their pogroms?
Literature on the present Arab-Israel conflict made available
through WCC, MECC, and the headquarters of the denominations all
draws on this Sabeel script: Palestinians are always and
exclusively victims; terrorist acts against Israel are either
ignored or rationalized as the hapless but heroic response of
unarmed civilians against tanks and guns. All unhappiness in the
Middle East, and most of the unhappiness everywhere else in the
world, has followed from the great mistake of letting Israel
come into the world in 1948. Never mind that the creation of the
State of Israel was approved by a 2/3 vote of the General
Assembly of the United nations: happiness will never appear on
the face of the earth until that decision is reversed.
The anomaly is that Christian friends and supporters of Israel
vastly outnumber the pro-Palestinian ideologues in the pews of
the very churches whose leaders are cranking out these anti-
Jewish provocations. Those individuals and organizations which
give voice to Christian Zionism are crudely dismissed in
official Church pamphlets as theological illiterates,
right-wingers, tools of Likud, offspring of the KKK -- “ none of
which I like to admit about myself. Years ago the WCC issued a
blanket anathema against the heresy of Christian Zionism. Those
of us who conclude that when St. Paul talks about Israel he
means Israel and when he says Zion he means Zion (e.g., in
Romans 11) are dismissed as fundamentalists (a word which long
ago lost all meaning " like the word fascist.) Meanwhile, the
temptation to fall into that heresy has been effectively removed
from the midst of Christian Arabs by the simple and clean
expedient of removing the Old Testament lessons from Church
services and removing the History of Israel from Sunday School
materials.
Since the day after the Six-Day War, during which Israel
thwarted the whole-hearted effort of the combined Arab nations
to remove her from the map and liquidate her population, the WCC
has been issuing statement after statement declaring unqualified
partisanship with the "Palestinian cause. At the Nairobi Asembly of the WCC in 1975, the WCC supported the PLO as the
rightful voice of the unfilled desire of the Palestinians for
nationhood and endorsed its right to build up its 'liberation'
armies under Yassir Arafat; at the Assembly in Vancouver in
1983 it called for the establishment of a Palestinian State. But
up until a few years ago, the authors of WCC statements always
took the time and trouble to let into their declarations a few
words about recognition of Israel's existence. Recent
statements, however, have taken the WCC so far down the path
towards demonization of Israel that one can find in them nothing
to dignify a case for Israel's right to life.
The turning point came just a few days before the al-Qaeda
attack on the United States, when WCC representatives attending
the UN Conference on Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia
and Related Intolerance held at Durban, South Africa, led a
meeting of NGOs in demanding official UN denunciation of Israel
for systematic perpetration of racist crimes including war
crimes, acts of genocide and ethnic cleansing. (The rumour is
that they dropped halitosis at the last moment.) Since then, WCC
statements, echoed by statements issuing from denominational
bodies in America and Europe, have revisited this corrosive
Durban language in order to strip Israel of the essential basis
of her right-to-life.
Today, the WCC is an unqualified ally of the enemies of Zionism.
It has no interest in speaking a kind word for the only proven
democracy in the Middle East, the only polity in the Middle East
where Christianity has been permitted to flourish. Having
brought on board the entire anti-historical truck about the
brutality of Crusaders and the unmixed beauties of the original
Muslim empires of the East, it now contemplates returning the
only non-Muslim portion of the Middle East to Islam.
Just as the confrontation between Israel and the protean legions
of nihilism has, by the abandonment of Gaza, been drawn up to
the front door of every resident of Israel, the WCC and several
of the major worldwide Protestant denominations have become
active partners in the campaign to destroy the Jewish nation. So
single-minded has this effort been that, at the denominational
conventions, the entire agenda of foreign policy issues has had
to be swept clear so that no distractive discussion has taken
place regarding China (where masses of Christian believers and
believers in other faiths languish without hope in windowless
cells) or regarding Zimbabwe (where agriculture has been
absolutely ruined and famine has been imposed on thousands so
that the Emperor Mugabe -- promoted by the WCC in the 19790s as
a Africa's prince of peace -- can build more palaces for
himself, or regarding Saudi Arabia (where Christianity is
forbidden), or well, forgive me, I am being tedious.
The instruments with which the denominations are now arming
themselves on behalf of the Palestinian cause are unfamiliar to
historians; but then, the history of warfare is really nothing
but the story of the invention of new and deadly weapons which
soldiers in conventional armies invariably fail to recognize as
lethal. These new weapons, dismantlement and divestment, are
meant to be lethal. They have been smuggled onto the scene under
the customary cynical cover of 'peace and justice.' The members
and adherents of the mainline denominations are told that they
are really not weapons at all but gestures of love, expressions
of the desire to achieve peace by defending the Palestinian
cause harmlessly against the superior adversary, Israel �€“ that
they are ingenious newfound ways to exercise 'the preferential
option for the poor and the weak“ an expression of the spirit
of the Beatitudes. But make no mistake, this calumny against the
spirit of the Beatitudes is for the sake of advancing the
liquidation of Israel.
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Paul C. Merkley, a retired Professor of
History from Carleton University and a consultant on foreign
policy, is the author of three books on Christian attitudes
towards the Jews, Israel, and Zionism, the most recent of which
is American Presidents, Religion and Israel (Praegar, 2004.)
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