As Epicenter Conference opens, The Jerusalem Post provides a sneak peak
at an exclusive new Joshua Fund poll of American Christian views of the
Jewish State.
By Joel C. Rosenberg
(Jerusalem, Israel, April 10, 2008) -- At the Epicenter Conference in
Jerusalem today, The Joshua Fund released partial results of an
exclusive poll of "American Christian Attitudes Towards Israel and the
Middle East." Full results will be posted soon on my weblog. What
follows is a front-page story in The Jerusalem Post.
U.S. Christians 'morally' support Israel
By Etgar Lefkovitz
More than 80 percent of American Christians say they have a "moral and
biblical obligation" to support the State of Israel, and half say
Jerusalem should remain its undivided capital, according to a survey
released on Thursday.
While evangelical Christians are the strongest supporters of the Jewish
state, strong pro-Israel convictions cut across all key Christian
denominations in the US, according to the poll carried out on behalf of
the Washington-based Joshua Fund, an evangelical organization.
Eight-two percent of respondents said they had a "moral and biblical
obligation" to love and support Israel and pray for the peace of
Jerusalem," 10% disagreed and 8% did not know.
Eighty-four percent of Protestants agreed with the statement (including
89% of Evangelicals), compared to 76% of Catholics.
Half of the American Christians surveyed opposed Israel dividing
Jerusalem with the Palestinians in a peace agreement, 33% were unsure
and 17% thought it should be divided.
Fifty-three percent of Protestants supported a united Jerusalem, as did
44% of Catholics.
Evangelical Christians were most supportive of a united Jerusalem, with
62% in favor and 11% against.
A plurality of the US Christians (44%) surveyed said they did not know
whether a future Palestinian state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip
would be a peaceful moderate democracy or a terrorist state, 32% said
that it would be a terrorist state and 24% said that it would be a
peaceful democracy.
The survey found clear differences between Protestants and Catholics on
the issue.
Protestants were more likely to say a Palestinian state would be a
terror state by a 10-point margin; Catholics were evenly split.
Evangelical Protestants said a such entity would be a terrorist state
by a 20-point margin, but non-evangelical Protestants said it would be
a peaceful and moderate democracy by six percentage points.
The belief that a Palestinian state would be a terrorist state was
strongest among Republican and conservative Evangelicals.
Nearly half (49%) of American Christians surveyed were interested in
visiting Israel, including about quarter of both Catholics and
Protestants who were "strongly" interested.
Forty-seven percent of those polled were not interested in visiting.
There are 50 million-60 million evangelicals Christians in the US.
Two-thirds of respondents said that if Iran developed nuclear weapons,
it would eventually try to use them to attack Israel, 23% were unsure
and 13% said Iran would not attack.
Finally, 45% said they would be more likely to support a US
presidential candidate who would protect America from Islamic
terrorism, protect Israel from a nuclear attack from Iran, oppose the
division of Jerusalem and refuse to pressure Israel to make concessions
on issues of national security, compared to 29% who said such positions
had no effect on their vote and 9% who would be less likely to support
such a candidate.
The survey will be officially released on Thursday at a conference at
the Jerusalem International Convention Center (Binyenei Ha'uma)
organized by The Joshua Fund that is expected to be attended by 2,000
evangelical Christians from around the world.
The non-profit organization aims to raise more than $100 million over
the next three years to help Israeli victims of terrorism, and to fund
humanitarian projects in Israel in education, health, welfare and
immigrant absorption, and $20m. for Christians in the West Bank, Gaza,
Iraq and Sudan, said Joel C. Rosenberg, the group's founder and
president.
"Our support for Israel is unwavering and unconditional," he said.
The survey, which was conducted by McLaughlin and Associates by a
telephone sampling of 1,000 American Christians last month, had a
margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points.
Original Source
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