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The Nuclear Card

Christians for Palestine

Posted on 22 April 2012 by Ilisha

Jerusalem Church

“Jesus was the first Palestinian martyr.” –Yasser Arafat

A few months back Israel’s Ambassador to the US, Michael Oren penned an article titled, “Israel and the plight of Palestinian Christians,” in which he attempted to manipulate the reality of Christians in the Holy Land. Oren’s article came on the heels of an Islamophobic screed by Ayaan H. Ali in Newsweek titled, “The War on Christians.”

Also, today, Bob Simon of 60 minutes will be reporting on the “slow exodus of Christians from the Holy Land.”

As the birthplace of Christianity, Palestine is home to the oldest Christian populations in the world. But after centuries of continuous presence in the Holy Land, the creation of modern-day Israel in 1948 precipitated a quiet exodus of native Christians.

Although Christian opinion on the Arab-Israeli conflict has always been mixed in Western countries, many evangelicals have been blind to the plight of  Palestinians in favor of Israeli hardliners. Though their unconditional support for Israel can be attributed to many factors, the phenomenon of “Christian Zionism” can at least in part be traced to concerted outreach efforts on behalf of Israel–bolstered by negative portrayals of the Palestinian people, and an absence of their narrative.

Christian Palestinian groups like Sabeel Center and Al-Bushra have had an on-line presence for years, but they were not widely known outside the Middle East. Recently, Palestinian Christians reached out to the global community with the launch of the Kairos Palestine Document, modeled after the South African Kairos Document published in 1985 as part of a successful effort to abolish Apartheid:

This document is the Christian Palestinians’ word to the world about what is happening in Palestine. It is written at this time when we wanted to see the Glory of the grace of God in this land and in the sufferings of its people. In this spirit the document requests the international community to stand by the Palestinian people who have faced oppression, displacement, suffering and clear apartheid for more than six decades. The suffering continues while the international community silently looks on at the occupying State, Israel. Our word is a cry of hope, with love, prayer and faith in God.

We address it first of all to ourselves and then to all the churches and Christians in the world, asking them to stand against injustice and apartheid, urging them to work for a just peace in our region, calling on them to revisit theologies that justify crimes perpetrated against our people and the dispossession of the land.

Also, last month in the West Bank city of  Christ’s birth, the Bethlehem Bible College  held an annual conference under the banner, “Christ at the Checkpoint.” Hundreds of Christians from around the world attended, and organizers hailed the event as, ”a major breakthrough in the evangelical world.”

While Palestinian Christians have so far reached only a small minority of their Western counterparts, their apparent success has captured the attention of Israel’s increasingly worried supporters.

Christians for Palestine

By Lee SmithTablet

For most American Jews and Israelis, evangelical Christians are synonymous with zealous, biblically inspired support of the Jewish state—so zealous, in fact, that it makes some Jews uneasy. But the days when Israel could count on unconditional support from evangelicals may be coming to an end.

Last month, a conference convened in Bethlehem by Palestinian activists and Christian clergy long at odds with the Jewish state managed to bring a number of leading lights from the evangelical community in North America and Europe to the Holy Land. Many of the speeches at the conference touched on themes that one would commonly hear at a BDS teach-in, like blaming the entire Middle East conflict on Israel’s occupation and the settlements.

Indeed, the name of the conference, Christ at the Checkpoint, is indicative of the different direction this segment of the evangelical movement is heading toward. The idea is that evangelicals should rethink their support for a state that occupies another people and oppresses them. Once they get the full story, conference organizers hope, Western evangelicals may find they have more in common with the downtrodden Palestinians than with the Israelis.

To pro-Israel evangelicals and Zionists who were paying attention, Christ at the Checkpoint was a wake-up call. The larger trend, which for want of a better phrase might be called the pro-Palestinian evangelical movement and is indeed spearheaded by Palestinian Christians, is already changing minds. Giving them momentum are money raised in the United States, theology, and perhaps most important of all, a movie. The documentary film With God on Our Side is leaving many former pro-Israel evangelicals wondering why they never heard the Palestinian side of the story.

Many friends of Israel, as well as Israelis, have long been concerned that evangelical support is premised largely on self-interest of an especially macabre nature. Israel, in this reading, is ground zero for the apocalypse: Before Christ can return to Earth, the Jews must return to Israel and the Temple must be restored, ushering in first a time of tribulation and then a reign of peace.

Of course, the apocalypse and Christ’s return is not the only justification for Christian support of Israel. Indeed, this end-time scenario embarrasses some evangelicals whose support is premised on the idea that God keeps his promises, not only to Christians but also to Jews, to whom God pledged the land of Israel. This conviction is further buttressed by a sense of historical responsibility, specifically to stand with the Jews and atone for the failure of Christians during the Holocaust to save the nation that gave them their savior.

Though the vast majority of evangelicals still maintain that support, for the first time since the establishment of Israel in 1948, there is an increasingly heated debate in the evangelical community that may augur a shift in the political winds. And if the Christ at the Checkpoint camp wins out, the pro-Israel Jewish community that once looked warily upon evangelical support may come to regard that movement with nostalgia.

***

“The debate in the Jewish community should not be about whether or not to be comfortable with Christian support for Israel,” David Brog, executive director of Christians United for Israel, told me last week. “Christians are going to be involved in the issue whether we are comfortable or not. The question is whether they’re going to be on Israel’s side or not.”

Christians United for Israel is the United States’ largest and best-known Christian Zionist organization. Founded in 2006 by John Hagee, pastor of the CornerStone Church in San Antonio, Texas, CUFI boasts over a million members. Hagee has found himself in the middle of political controversy in the past—most recently during John McCain’s unsuccessful 2008 presidential campaign when his statements regarding the Holocaust were misinterpreted and McCain rejected his support. (Hagee declined to comment for this article.)

John Hagee

Hagee and other figures base support for the Jewish state on biblical foundations, specifically on Genesis 12:3, where God tells Abraham, “I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee.” The message is clear: Those who support Israel will be rewarded by God. But pro-Israel evangelicals have sent their flock out into the field vulnerable—that is, without an account of the conflict that besets the citizens of the present-day homeland of the Jews. Armed only with a biblical defense of the Jewish state, evangelicals are unprepared to justify it on political grounds.

This gap has made room for people across the cultural and ideological spectrum—whose motivations run the gamut from genuine compassion for Palestinians to anti-Semitism—to fill the space with their own interpretations of contemporary Middle East history. Not surprisingly, many of these narratives tend to be drawn from precincts of the left, like the BDS movement, that are known for their hostility to the Jewish state. What is peculiar is that these accounts are being entertained and sometimes embraced in evangelical churches, Bible schools, and Christian colleges that are not typically known for their progressive politics.

It wasn’t difficult for these Christian critics of Israel to find a weak link in the Christian Zionist narrative—it’s the ethical morass inherent in the formulation of Genesis 12:3. The children of the Bible, Christians as well as Jews, believe that all people are created in God’s image and are therefore born with individual dignity. But if people of faith are supposed to bless Israel because they’ll be blessed in return, then they are treating others, Jews and Arabs, not as individuals but rather as instruments in their own spiritual drama.

You can’t treat people as chess pieces, says Porter Speakman Jr., the 40-year-old director of With God on Our Side. This 82-minute-long documentary, which premiered in 2010 and is now being shown at churches and college campuses, has had a major role in tilting evangelical opinion, especially among young people, against Israel. Speakman told me in a phone interview that isn’t aim isn’t to “delegitimize Israel, but to be critical of policies that are having an effect on real people’s lives.”

“I grew up in a Christian home in the south, where not to support Israel was to go against God,” Speakman told me. He said he made the film in order to explore a question that he thinks has been missing from the conversation in the evangelical community. That is: “What are the consequences of my beliefs and my theology for real people living on the ground?”

With God on Our Side follows the intellectual odyssey of Christopher Harrell, a twenty-something recent film-school graduate, who is trying to come to grips with the reality of the Arab-Israeli conflict. This is a very different story from the Bible-based injunctions that formed his spiritual life as a child. The film’s narrative trajectory starts with Harrell’s parents, who he recalls once celebrated Passover—“I’m not sure why we did that. We’re not Jewish. We’re just this normal American Midwestern family”—and who support Israel because that’s “just what everyone did.” The film moves then to a series of interviews with figures in the evangelical community known for their animus toward Zionism, like Gary Burge and Stephen Sizer, and writers outside the evangelical milieu whose reputation rests on their hostility to Israel, like Ilan Pappé and Norman Finkelstein.

These interviews challenge the mainstream evangelical narrative with well-worn accusations typical of BDSers. For instance, the Israeli occupation, says one South African evangelical, is “apartheid on steroids.”

“Growing up,” Speakman said of his childhood, “there was never a choice, you were supposed to love and support Israel. That meant following Genesis 12 as well as a fulfillment of endtime prophecies. But does supporting Israel mean supporting all of Israel’s geopolitical decisions?”

Speakman, who lived in Israel with his wife from 1998 until 2003, said that he thinks the role of Christians is to support both Jews and Arabs in their search for a solution. But some critics of his documentary think that the film goes much further. They see it as making the case that evangelicals have taken the wrong side—favoring a nation inhabited by those who rejected Jesus as their savior rather than the Christian communities that have existed in the Holy Land since the time of Christ. The issue is that key segments of the Palestinian Christian community have a vested political interest in delegitimizing Zionism—a fact that Speakman and other Western activists in the evangelical community may or may not be aware of.

Among the Palestinian outfits leading the campaign critical of Israel is the Bethlehem Bible College, which organized Christ at the Checkpoint, for which Speakman served as a media coordinator. The most prominent and active organization is the Jerusalem-based Sabeel, headed by a Palestinian Anglican priest, Rev. Naim Ateek. Its American branch, Friends of Sabeel North America, is based in Portland, Ore., and raises money for its Jerusalem affiliate.

“Sabeel is nakedly hostile to Israel,” Dexter Van Zile, Christian media analyst for CAMERA, told me in an interview. In an article on Sabeel and Ateek published last week, Van Zile quotes the clergyman at length, including this peculiar admission: “From my perspective as a Palestinian Christian, Zionism is a step backward in the development of Judaism.”

***

According to Randy Neal, Western Regional Coordinator of CUFI, the ideological foundations of the pro-Palestinian Christian movement are grounded in both liberation theology and replacement theology. The first is a politicized doctrine that requires a continual mindset of victimhood, in order to solicit political sympathy and action on behalf of the “oppressed” against the “oppressors.” The latter holds that the church has replaced Jews as God’s chosen and become the real Israel.

“It’s not just that church has replaced Israel,” said Neal, but for many of the Palestinian Christian clergy and their activist sympathizers, “the Palestinian church is the real church. Jesus, on this reading, was an underdog, who came to champion the underdog. He was oppressed by the Romans, so if you are Christ-like, you are also oppressed, like the Palestinians. This increasingly includes the idea that Jesus was a Palestinian. It’s an adopted narrative that is believed to have started with Yasser Arafat, but to some people it’s become a gospel fact.”

In other words, it’s a narrative that denies Jesus’ Jewish identity. “It is a very ugly expression of Christian anti-Semitism,” Neal said.

But Brog, Neal’s colleague, disagrees: “anti-Semitism is not the driving force.” Rather, he said, the impetus comes from a combination of two ideological streams. “There’s the anti-Israel perspective, which comes from the Palestinian Christians, who are using theology to preach a politically anti-Israel message. And then there are the Christians based in North America and Europe who are allowing liberal politics to trump Christian beliefs.”

The unpleasant reality is that Christian anti-Semitism has as much, if not more, theological justification as Christian support for Israel. Compared to two millennia of Christian anti-Semitism culminating with the Holocaust, one biblical verse is a pretty thin thread on which to hang support of the Jewish state.

Neal says that he believes Christian love of Israel is premised on Genesis 12:3 and on Joel 3:2: “I will also gather all nations, and will bring them down into the valley of Jehoshaphat, and will enter into judgement with them there for my people, my heritage Israel.”

“We are supposed to love what God loves,” Neal said. “We consider ourselves ambassadors of Christ. For centuries, Christians abused and abandoned the apple of God’s eye, and we are not going to let that happen again on our watch.”

But as CUFI pushes Genesis and Joel, the Christ at the Checkpoint crowd is focused exclusively on Palestinians’ distress and apparently ignoring history. CAMERA’s Van Zile, who attended last month’s conference, noted that nowhere in the pro-Palestinian evangelical narrative is there any account of Jewish persecution. “I’ve heard moving testimony about Palestinian suffering. But they don’t acknowledge Muslim anti-Semitism. They don’t talk about Palestinian leadership, or how it’s abused the Palestinian community. There’s no account of Hamas in their story about Israel.”

********

John Hagee of the rabid Zionist Christians United for Israel, trying to drag the US into a war with Iran:

 

  • Géji

    @Palestinian says: “Jesus was the first Palestinian martyr.”

    “What’s wrong with this statement? He was Palestinian and he died defending a noble cause. That makes him a Palestinian martyr.”

    You’re right! absolutely nothing’s wrong with that statement, not a thing. Even more true for the simple reason that Jesus of Nazareth just like his descendants today, was a Palestinian martyr under constant oppression and subjugation that ended-up costing him his life, the exact same their experiencing today in his ancestral homeland. The only ones that’ll find problem with such statement are Zionist boot-licking Islamophobes, known for their boneless hypocrisy and servile attitude at worshiping the ground zionist boots walk-on. ugh!!

  • Just Stopping By

    @Géji:

    For Jesus to be the first Palestinian martyr, then there would have to be no Palestinian martyrs before him. That’s just a way of trying to separate Jesus from his connection to the Jewish people, his actual flesh and blood, not to mention the people whose texts were the only ones he recognized as Scripture and whose holidays he celebrated.

    The only way that quote could possibly make sense is if all the Jewish martyrs before Jesus were not Palestinian but Jesus suddenly became a Palestinian, a term that he would have at best recognized as a foreign term for (roughly) the areas he would know as Judea and the Galilee.

  • Just Stopping By

    @Ravenscroft and Muslim Heritage.com:

    I think that what I will say is consistent with Finkelstein, even though he may not be quite that explicit. The issue with BDS is that there are at least two groups within it. For those who want to eliminate Israel, their support of the BDS movement makes perfect sense.

    For those who want to pressure Israel to allow the Palestinians to set up a viable independent state in the West Bank and Gaza, achievement of their goals is actually hampered by their association with the others in their movement with larger goals. If you want the target of sanctions to capitulate, they have to believe that capitulating will result in a reversal of the sanctions. But, if Israel thinks that the first group would actually be energized by any success from the BDS movement in terms of the West Bank and Gaza, that will only make the Israelis more intransigent.

    Finkelstein correctly notes that the BDS movement is purposefully vague if not misleading in some areas, so as not to alienate any of its supporters. But, while that keeps everyone in the fold, it also means that the target is more reluctant to make any concessions.

  • Géji

    HGG Says: “No, He wasn’t.” .. to “Jesus was the first Palestinian martyr.”” –Yasser Arafat

    Oh my AraboIslamophobia!! @Hgg I guess from afarland you know more than Yasser Arafat actually knows he’s own people don’t ya!! Who know better what Jesus represented other than the actual flesh and blood?

  • Ravenscroft

    “The problem with BDS is that it targets the Israeli voices we need.”

    No, I don’t think so, http://mondoweiss.net/2012/03/two-israeli-refusers-on-why-they-support-bds.html

    “Why don’t Christian Churches call for divestment from the USA, from all Likud lobby, Christian Zionist causes and churches in the USA.”

    Sure, that too.

  • http://www.muslimheritage.com/ Muslim Heritage .com

    Ravenscroft

    Finkelsten was right.

    The problem with BDS is that it targets the Israeli voices we need. This problem actually has it’s roots in the USA. That is what you need to tackle. The Congress. Christian Zionism. Hard line Likud lobby in the USA.

    Those are the problems. Once they are tackled, then Israel will fall into line. Note that Netanyahu was grovelling before AIPAC.

    Why don’t Christian Churches call for divestment from the USA, from all Likud lobby, Christian Zionist causes and churches in the USA.

    Now that is a divestment i support 100%.

    You need to tackle the funders like Irving Moscovitz, Sheldon Adelson, and the Christian Zionsts who fund the settlers.

  • From the wastelands….

    I’d like to see the answer to that myself.

  • Believing Atheist

    @Susana,

    When you say Jesus was born in Judea (I am assuming you believe that he was born in Bethlehem in Judea, if not correct me) that is archaeologically false. Here is why:

    Perhaps the most important reason to suspect the accuracy of Matthew and Luke is that Bethlehem in Judea did not exist as a functioning town between 7 and 4 BCE when Jesus is believed to have been born. Archaeological studies of the town have turned up a great deal of ancient Iron Age material from 1200 to 550 BCE 7 and lots of material from the sixth century CE, but nothing from the 1st century BCE or the 1st century CE.
    http://www.religioustolerance.org/xmaswwjb.htm

    Also you did not answer my second question: Would Jesus support the Gaza blockade knowing that it leads to misery and poverty for a great many?

  • Susanna

    @ Believing Atheist

    So a Greek named that area Palestine. The Kingdom of Israel and then the Northern Kingdom and the Southern Kingdom (Judah) were there long before that. The Philistine states were west, Phoenicians to the North. The kingdoms of Damascus, Ammon,and Moab were to the East. And the kingdom of Edom and the Arubu tribes to the south. During the Roman conquest of the entire region the Herodians claimed that region as a kingdom and the Romans permitted it to keep control of uprisings. However,it included Samaria and Judea (Judah). Jesus was born in the Roman Province of Judea. The area was never ruled as Palestine, therefore, Jesus is Judean and a Jew, as the religion of the region was Judaism. The Romans renamed the region when in 132 CE after destroying rebellion it was called Palestine to rid the Jews of their identity.

    During the Ottoman rule it was known as the region of Palestine but was a general term used to describe the land south of Syria not an official designation. It was then applied to the British Mandate before 1948 and designated for Jews not Arabs living in the mandate.

    Palestine or Filastin (in Arabic) does not appear in the Koran but 250 times in the Tanakh. I’d say then it designates a Jewish connection. Palestine and Israel are not interchangable.

    As a Bible believing Christian, I would never say the book is myth, there is plenty of historical and archeological evidence to the contrarry. As a atheist, I can see why you would believe that.

  • Believing Atheist

    @Ravenscroft,

    I am okay with Israel maintaining a Jewish majority because Israel is a Jewish state (it’s in their declaration), but I oppose the settlements, want Palestine to have economically viable borders and East Jerusalem as its capital (in other words I support a divided Jerusalem).

  • Believing Atheist

    @Susana

    My dear Susana,

    I never was really good at math in school but Herodotus wrote of a ‘district of Syria, called Palaistinê” inThe Histories, the first historical work clearly defining the region, which included the Judean mountains and the Jordan Rift Valley

    It used to be the name of Israel as documented by David Jacobson
    http://cojs.org/cojswiki/When_Palestine_Meant_Israel,_David_Jacobson,_BAR_27:03,_May/Jun_2001.

    Furthermore,

    Like Herodotus, Aristotle gives the strong impression that when he uses the term Palestine, he is referring to the Land of Israel. In his description of the Dead Sea, Aristotle says that it is situated in Palestine.4 The Land of the Philistines, however, was separated from the Dead Sea by the hills and wilderness of Judea, so Aristotle could hardly have intended the two to be directly connected! He, too, seemed to identify the Land of Israel as Palestine. (Same source).

    Jacobson concludes:

    Startling as it may sound, I would argue that “Palestine” is the Greek equivalent of “Israel.” The word Palaistinê is remarkably similar to the Greek palaistês, meaning “wrestler,” “rival” or “adversary.”12 This similarity in spelling was noticed over 60 years ago by the German Bible scholar Martin Noth.13 He saw this as a reflection of a practice of transliterating oriental words into Greek words that were easy to pronounce, like referring to Beijing as Peking in English. Noth failed to develop his argument any further. But the similarity between Palaistinê and palaistês would seem to have a significance deeper than a mere transliteration.

    Now let’s do some simple historical investigation and unnumbered math
    (1) Herodotus lived and wrote before the birth of Jesus
    (2) Aristotle lived and wrote before the birth of Jesus

    Furthermore, if Palestine can be interchanged with Israel, then Jesus indeed was born in Palestine.

    But more importantly, why do you use a book of myth i.e., the Bible to justify the allocation of real-estate for one people?

    Even many Jews didn’t do that and that’s why many such as Golda Meir, Rabin and Herzl were secular-Zionists who simply reaffirmed the right of Jewish self-determinism in the land of their ancestors, without invoking God.

    If you argue that the Bible is not a book of myth well…then we are going to have a great discussion.

    Secondly, what’s so Christian about the Gaza blockade, which the UN has found perpetuates unemployment and stagnates wages leading to poverty?
    http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=38707

    Wasn’t your Jesus a fighter for the poor and meek of the earth?

  • Susanna

    By way of review, a team of religious Leftists put on a conference that week in Bethlehem. The imagery is war-like: “Checkpoint” and “wall of separation” to begin with. You can read what I wrote a few weeks ago here. The event was really a bash-Israel brigade that called Israel apartheid Nazis “occupying” Arab land. There is not a word that the land is God-given to the Jews and that covenants are everlasting. Their secondary intent was to smash the image of Christian Zionists (Christians who are friends of Israel) and smear theology that considers end-time issues and Israel’s rightful role in those issues.

    This crowd believes that the church is the new Israel, a theology known as Replacement Theology. It allows them to disinherit Israel and to even look past Arab terror attacks on Israel just as Germany’s churches disregarded anti-Semitism 80 years ago thanks to Replacement Theology. God was finished with the Jews. Enter the royal church center stage.

    “Christ at the Checkpoint” produced a “manifesto.” You can read about it here. It represents either Amillennialism or Dominion/Kingdom Now Theology. Any of these options are not options! They’re bad theology. We’re not in the Millennium now and the church is not destined to reign on earth. But those theologies conveniently knock Israel and her rightful end-time role out of the picture. Thus, they’re a part of the “manifesto” from the “Christ at the Checkpoint” event.

    The International Christian Embassy, Jerusalem, sums up “Christ at the Checkpoint” by saying, “Evangelicals are being shamed into abandoning Israel because they are supposedly uncompassionate and blocking peace. Indeed, this new initiative aims to totally discredit pro-Israel evangelicals with clever lies and distortions. As one person observed, ‘The usual understanding of Israel as an aggressive, colonial, apartheid state, robbing the Palestinians of their heritage, is quite possibly the greatest political scam of modern times. It is the outcome of a mixture of historical amnesia, ideological prejudice, and reflex hostility, which keep it mind-proof.’ ”

    I interject; it is first and foremost the fruit of Replacement Theology. If your favorite Bible teacher represents this, understand that things will be skewed and the one you think is so sound, has serious issues with God, not man. This is the theology of an unfaithful covenant breaker who doesn’t keep His word. (Posted 3/15/2012 Checked at the Checkpoint by Jan Markell)

    ” Christ at the Checkpoint” was a sham, and those that align themselves with them are furthering heresy. True Christians will always uphold Israel and its right to exist as THE homeland of the Jewish people.

    @ Palestinian
    Jesus was never a Palestinian. Palestine did not exist when He walked the earth. He was a Jew and descendant of King David. Nor was he a martyr, He willing went to the cross to redeem mankind and willingly paid the price that we could not pay.

  • Ravenscroft

    @Believing Atheist

    I respect Finkelestein and agree with him on some issues, but not this one.

    He said in the video your posted, “people are willing to accept international law.” Really? We’ve had 45 years of occupation that is illegal under international law, and most of the Western public could care less.

    There are a lot of people who are for Palestinian rights in theory, and they indulge in a lot high-sounding talk. But when it really comes to granting rights to the Palestinians on the ground, their duplicity is quickly exposed.

    They’re for Palestinian rights as long as every settlement can stay in place, Israel keeps a Jewish majority and all of Jerusalem, the Palestinians settle for tiny, disconnected “Indian” reservations, controlled on all sides by Israel, and so on, which really means things stay pretty much the same.

    I’m for Palestinian rights in the real world, right now–by any NON-VIOLENT means available, including divestment and sanctions.

  • Believing Atheist

    @Ravenscroft

    “At least now the message is clear. The Palestinians were never denied their rights because of anything they did or didn’t do–they simply don’t have rights, period.”

    That’s not what I was saying at all Ravenscroft. I oppose the BDS movement for the same reason Norman Finkelstein does
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iggdO7C70P8

    Watch the entire interview here:
    http://mondoweiss.net/2012/02/norman-finkelstein-slams-the-bds-movement-calling-it-a-cult.html

    Now are you going to say that Norman Finkelstein is a person who denies Palestinians their rights or asserts that they have no rights period?!

  • Ravenscroft

    I’m support BDS and all non-violent means of securing Palestinian rights.

    For years the Palestinians were crtiicized when they turned to violence. Now activists inside and outside of Palestine are turning to peaceful strategies and of course, that isn’t welcomed either.

    No divestment, no sanctions, no flotillas, no flytillas, no direct requests to the UN, no peaceful protests…etc.

    At least now the message is clear. The Palestinians were never denied their rights because of anything they did or didn’t do–they simply don’t have rights, period.

  • Believing Atheist

    I forgot to say, I don’t embrace divestment from all of Israel btw. I oppose the BDS movement in general, but perhaps a case can be made to divest from companies that perpetuate settlements, as Peter Beinart did in his writings.

  • Believing Atheist

    This isn’t new. Christians have long been for Palestinian rights. That is why Presbyterian Church, World Council of Churches, United Church of Christ, New England Conference of the United Methodist Church and others have divested or planned on divesting from Israel.

    See below:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disinvestment_from_Israel#Presbyterian_Church_.28USA.29

  • http://www.youtube.com/user/GargamelGold?feature=mhee CriticalDragon1177

    @Ilisha

    Too few people try to get a balanced look at the Palestinian/Israeli conflict. prior to 9/11 I got most of my information on what was going on over there from biased sources that were highly pro Israel. I didn’t hear much from the Palestinian side and was led to believe that Israel treated them justly and that it was only the Palestinians that were standing in the way of peace. I think if I had had a more balanced objective understanding of what was going on over there, I would have been much less likely to take people like Robert Spencer seriously. People in the “counter jihad” also tend to blame the plight of Palestinian Christians entirely on Palestinian Muslims, if they acknowledge it at all, and utterly ignore or deny the mistreatment of them at the hands of the Israeli government. I’m so glad that more Christians are coming to have a more balanced, and open minded assessment of what’s really going on over there.

  • Palestinian

    “Jesus was the first Palestinian martyr.”

    What’s wrong with this statement? He was Palestinian and he died defending a noble cause.

    That makes him a Palestinian martyr.

  • NurAlia

    @mindy…

    Belive it or not…the notions of ‘Zionists’ are the “opposing viewpoints’ in most of the world.

    ONLY in the west, has ‘hasbara’ allowed the direct assoicaltion of Zionism with Jews and Israelis. For the rest of us, Zionism is a political ideology, and not a person, or religion.

    Most people belive that the nation of Israel has a militaristic government based on those who manipulate the past pain of Jews to create themselves as ‘the savior’ to ‘prevent it happening again’.

    In other words mindy…almost everyone supports the right of everyone else to ‘exist’. If they want to call themselves ‘Israelis’…we support that too, and will defend it.

    However…hardly no one supports the right of someone, or something over the right of someone else to exist. Everyone has the right to self preservation…and there is no ‘side’ to take in this issue.

    Mindy…I want to embrace an Israeli…and if I could tell her…that as a fellow human…I am sorry for the rest of us looking the other way as your family hurt….but Zionism wont let me. I cant come as I am.

  • Just Stopping By

    I was actually pleasantly surprised by the degree to which this article presented many sides to the issue. If you read it through, and don’t just look at the headine, you will find a lot to think about on all sides. I encourage everyone to do so. Thanks, Ilisha.

    One issue, however, is that it seems to miss context. “With 122,000 Arab Christians living in Israel, as Arab citizens of Israel, this is one of the biggest Arab Christian communities in the world. It is also the only Arab Christian community in the Middle East which experiences a net population growth.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arab_Christians. If Arab Christian population growth is positive in Israel but negative in the rest of the Middle East, well, draw your own conclusions.

    @HGG: Of course! I should say, if you read this article and think about every statement you will hopeuflly learn much, including how political figures try to manipulate history.

  • Lillian

    Walt and Mearsheirmer said in their book “The Israel Lobby”, that Christian Zionism influence would recede with time, and it’s a passing fad.
    —————————————————
    John Mearsheimer Stephen Walt – The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy.
    • Aug. 4th, 2008

    http://mearsheimerwalt.livejournal.com/35155.html

    How important is the Christian Zionist branch of the Israel lobby?

    By providing financial support to the settler movement and by publicly inveighing against territorial concessions, the Christian Zionists have reinforced hard-line attitudes in Israel and the United States and have made it more difficult for American leaders to put pressure on Israel. Absent their support, settlers would be less numerous in Israel, and the U.S. and Israeli governments would be less constrained by their presence in the Occupied Territories as well as their political activities. Plus, Christian tourism (a substantial portion occurring under evangelical auspices) has become a lucrative source of income for Israel, reportedly generating revenues in the neighborhood of $ 1 billion each year.111

    The presence of a vocal but non-Jewish voice in support of Israel also makes U.S. backing more than just a response to special pleading by American Jewry and probably exerts some effect on the political calculations of politicians who do not have large Jewish constituencies. Irvine Anderson suggests that dispensationalist thinking reinforces “an American cultural predisposition to support the State of Israel, based in part on the influence of the Christian Bible.” In particular, “having grown up hearing Bible stories … or having read about . . . the ingathering of Jews to Palestine as a prelude to the Second Coming, it is not surprising that many, though certainly not all, Americans simply assume that it is right and proper for Jews to return to Palestine and create their own state there.”112
    Yet the influence of the Christian Zionists should not be overstated. Their strong commitment to a “greater Israel” and resulting opposition to a two-state solution did not prevent the Clinton administration from pursuing the latter at Camp David in 2000, did not halt the 1998 Wye Agreement mandating an Israeli redeployment from parts of the West Bank, and, perhaps most revealingly, did not stop President George W. Bush, who has close ties to the Christian Right, from declaring his own support for a Palestinian state in 2001.

    There are several reasons why Christian Zionists exert less impact on U.S. Middle East policy than the other parts of the Israel lobby do. Although the Christian Right has been a key part of President Bush’s political base (which has to some degree magnified the visibility of the Christian Zionist elements within this broader movement), the alliance goes well beyond the issue of Israel to include a broad array of social issues. Supporting Israel is only one of the many issues that evangelicals like Robertson, Bauer, and Fal-well have been concerned with, and it may not even be the most important. Leaders of the Christian Right often claim to speak on behalf of forty million or more professed evangelical Christians, but the number of followers who care deeply about Israel is undoubtedly smaller. In addition, and in sharp contrast to groups like AIPAC, Christian Zionists lack the organizational capacity to analyze national security topics or to offer specific legislative guidance on concrete foreign policy issues. Surveys of congressional aides by Ruth Mouly in the 1980s and Irvine Anderson in 1999 found “little evidence of extensive direct lobbying of Congress by Falwell or other prominent members of the Religious Right on the subject of Israel.”113 Similarly, Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, founder of IFCJ, told the Israeli writer Zev Chafets that a delegation of evangelicals he had taken to visit then National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice in 2003 “was the only Christian group ever to lobby the White House specifically on behalf of Israel.”114 Even if Eckstein overstated the case somewhat, it is clear that Israel is only one of many items on the evangelicals’ list of concerns. By contrast, groups like AIPAC, the Anti-Defamation League, ZOA, and the

  • mindy1

    I wish him luck, interesting to see an opposing viewpoint

  • Peter

    Statement by the Patriarch and Local Heads of Churches In Jerusalem

    “Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the children of God.” (Matthew 5:9)

    Christian Zionism is a modern theological and political movement that embraces the most extreme ideological positions of Zionism, thereby becoming detrimental to a just peace within Palestine and Israel. The Christian Zionist programme provides a worldview where the Gospel is identified with the ideology of empire, colonialism and militarism. In its extreme form, it laces an emphasis on apocalyptic events leading to the end of history rather than living Christ’s love and justice today. We categorically reject Christian Zionist doctrines as false teaching that corrupts the biblical message of love, justice and reconciliation.

    We further reject the contemporary alliance of Christian Zionist leaders and organizations with elements in the governments of Israel and the United States that are presently imposing their unilateral pre-emptive borders and domination over Palestine. This inevitably leads to unending cycles of violence that undermine the security of all peoples of the Middle East and the rest of the world.

    We reject the teachings of Christian Zionism that facilitate and support these policies as they advance racial exclusivity and perpetual war rather than the gospel of universal love, redemption and reconciliation taught by Jesus Christ. Rather than condemn the world to the doom of Armageddon we call upon everyone to liberate themselves from the ideologies of militarism and occupation. Instead, let them pursue the healing of the nations!

    We call upon Christians in Churches on every continent to pray for the Palestinian and Israeli people, both of whom are suffering as victims of occupation and militarism. These discriminative actions are turning Palestine into impoverished ghettos surrounded by exclusive Israeli settlements. The establishment of the illegal settlements and the construction of the Separation Wall on confiscated Palestinian land undermines the viability of a Palestinian state as well as peace and security in the entire region.

    We call upon all Churches that remain silent, to break their silence and speak for reconciliation with justice in the Holy Land.

    Therefore, we commit ourselves to the following principles as an alternative way:

    We affirm that all people are created in the image of God. In turn they are called to honor the dignity of every human being and to respect their inalienable rights.

    We affirm that Israelis and Palestinians are capable of living together within peace, justice and security.

    We affirm that Palestinians are one people, both Muslim and Christian. We reject all attempts to subvert and fragment their unity.

    We call upon all people to reject the narrow world view of Christian Zionism and other ideologies that privilege one people at the expense of others.

    We are committed to non-violent resistance as the most effective means to end the illegal occupation in order to attain a just and lasting peace.

    With urgency we warn that Christian Zionism and its alliances are justifying colonization, apartheid and empire-building.

    God demands that justice be done. No enduring peace, security or reconciliation is possible without the foundation of justice. The demands of justice will not disappear. The struggle for justice must be pursued diligently and persistently but non-violently.

    “What does the Lord require of you, to act justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.” (Micah 6:8)

    This is where we take our stand. We stand for justice. We can do no other. Justice alone guarantees a peace that will lead to reconciliation with a life of security and prosperity for all the peoples of our Land. By standing on the side of justice, we open ourselves to the work of peace – and working for peace makes us children of God.

    “God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting men’s sins against them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation.” (2 Cor 5:19)

    His Beattitude Patriarch Michel Sabbah
    Latin Patriarchate, Jerusalem

    Archbishop Swerios Malki Mourad,
    Syrian Orthodox Patriarchate, Jerusalem

    Bishop Riah Abu El-Assal,
    Episcopal Church of Jerusalem and the Middle East

    Bishop Munib Younan,
    Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land

    The Jerusalem Declaration on Christian Zionism is a document signed on behalf of the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, the Syrian Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem, the Episcopal Church in Jerusalem and the Middle East, and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land. It is dated August 22, 2006. The Declaration does reject Christian Zionism, concluding that it is a “false teaching that corrupts the biblical message of love, justice and reconciliation. ” All of the above Churches in support of the Declaration are local and include Palestinian Christians. Several reasons are given, among them the following. “The Christian Zionist programme provides a worldview where the Gospel is identified with the ideology of empire, colonialism and militarism. In its extreme form, it places an emphasis on apocalyptic events leading to the end of history rather than living Christ’s love and justice today. ” “We call upon Christians in Churches on every continent to pray for the Palestinian and Israeli people. ” The Jerusalem Declaration cites Micah 6:8, “What does the Lord require of you but to do justice, to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God. ” Also, 2nd Corinthians 5:19, “God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting sins against the sinners. He has entrusted to us the message of reconciliation. ” It begins with a quotation from Matthew 5:9, “Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the children of God. ” The Jerusalem Declaration condemns current Christian Zionist support for the territorial expansion of Israel, yet the Declaration also states its commitment to “non-violent resistance”. It does not fault the foundation of Israel, or the continued existence of the State of Israel. In this respect the Jerusalem Declaration is not anti-Zionist, but rather it may be said to indicate a willingness to abide with what it might call the just and peaceful development of Zionism. In general terms, the Jerusalem Declaration rejects “Christian Zionism” for substituting a political-military program in place of the teachings of Jesus Christ. The teachings of Scripture are interpreted to center on “love, justice, and reconciliation”

  • HGG

    “Jesus was the first Palestinian martyr.”

    No, He wasn’t.

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