'My Job Is to Get the Oil for Israel,' Says Born-Again Christian John
Brown
By SIMON MCGREGOR-WOOD
When I first heard about John Brown, the American born-again Christian
looking for oil in Israel, I thought, "well & he's obviously
unhinged."
Everyone knows Israel doesn't have oil, right? I mean, Israel
celebrates its 60th birthday next year, and if it had any of the black
stuff, surely some clever person would have found it by now! So, it was
with some skepticism that I approached this story and Brown.
The first impression I had of the man, himself, was that he was
charming and not quite the wide-eyed evangelical I had expected. We
picked him up at his hotel for the first of several meetings. He proved
a good talker, and seemed honest and sincere.
With disarming candor, he described his former life as a high-powered
businessman, and how he had run into drinking problems in the early
1980s. He said he had a religious experience in 1981 that changed his
life.
"There were some things in my life that needed to be cleared up with
the Lord. I felt like God actually took a hose and washed me, and I
felt like the sin was actually rolling off me," Brown said, as we
chatted, overlooking the holy sites of Jerusalem.
It wasn't long before Brown heard a sermon from a visiting preacher,
talking about oil in Israel. It was another turning point in his life
that began a 25-year journey.
Brown came to Israel in 1983, and it was there that he fell in love
with the landscape and people, and found his mission. That mission was
to find the hidden oil he believes is there. His unshakeable faith in
the oil lies in the Scriptures. There are passages in the Bible which,
for Brown, stand out like sign posts to the oil he hopes to find.
For example, in Genesis 49:25, Jacob promises Joseph "the almighty
shall bless thee with the blessings of heaven above, and the blessings
of the deep that lieth under."
For Brown, those underground blessings can mean only one thing oil.
Most biblical scholars believe other references to oil in the Bible
refer to olive oil, but don't tell Brown that. His belief is unmovable,
and his optimism unshakeable.
"My job is to get the oil for Israel, I'm totally focused on that. What
I'm doing it for is to help Israel, so that Israel can become
geo-politically stronger and more independent," he said.
To back up his faith and convince people he is serious, Brown has
formed a company called Zion Oil and Gas. It's a team of real oil men
with a lot of experience. Glen Perry is one an oil man with decades
of exploration under his belt. I asked him what he thought about the
project.
"It is, without doubt, the most exciting project I've ever been
involved with," he said.
Not a bad endorsement from a man who admits he was a skeptic. But now,
he's a believer, too, but not like Brown. Perry believes in the science
he believes Israel has oil, because millions of dollars worth of
seismology and geological research tells him it should be here.
Zion Oil has been drilling an exploration well this year in the north
of Israel, near the town of Hadera. The company has exclusive drilling
rights for thousands of acres of land.
What they say they have found makes them very excited strong evidence
of hydro carbons, the essential foundations of oil and gas. Next
spring, the drilling starts again to a deeper level, where Brown is
convinced he will strike it rich.
It hasn't always been easy, and Brown's faith, as well as his bank
account, have been challenged. As we stood looking at the Wailing Wall
in Jerusalem's Old City, he reflected on the struggle.
"There were times in my heart I knew the Bible was true, but I didn't
have any idea why it wasn't working any sooner. I didn't plan a 25-year
journey. I thought it was a simple case of getting a license, getting
the oil and doing good things with the money," he said.
But up at the site of the drilling, his old self-confidence soon
returned, and I found myself slowly getting drawn into his vision of
what he expects this place to become a major oil production site.
There's not much to see there now, but he promises that next spring,
his dream will become a reality, as his drill reaches 18,000 feet below
the surface. And whatever the doubters say and there are plenty if
it happens, and if he discovers oil, it couldn't happen to a person who
wanted it more.
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