The issue of where to take a stand concerning the Land and People of
Israel continues to divide Christians who choose to reinterpret the
scriptures through liberal and socialist lenses from those who insist
that the Bible is the unchanging Word of God.
In a letter published in the Sunday edition of the New York Times, 34
self-styled "evangelical leaders" wrote to US President George W. Bush,
urging him to forge ahead with his plan to implement a "two state
solution" to the "Palestinian"-Israeli conflict.
The document appears to have been drawn up in reaction to the
statements of high-profile evangelicals like John Hagee who have
recently asserted anew that tens of millions of American evangelicals
identify themselves as Christian Zionists and oppose the
globally-supported effort to establish an Arab state on the biblical
heartland and national cradle of the Jewish people.
Twisting both the meaning of scripture and historic fact to support
their position, the signatories to the letter -- who claimed to speak
on behalf of "large numbers of evangelicals throughout the US" --
sought to "encourage" Bush with the assertion that not "all American
evangelicals are opposed to a two-state solution and creation of a new
Palestinian state that includes the vast majority of the West Bank
[sic]."
They had written "to thank [Bush] for [his] efforts (including the
major address on July 16) to reinvigorate the Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations to achieve a lasting peace in the region.
"We affirm your clear call for a two-state solution. We urge that your
administration not grow weary in the time it has left in office to
utilize the vast influence of America to demonstrate creative,
consistent and determined US leadership to create a new future for
Israelis and Palestinians [sic]."
The letter continued:
"We also write to correct a serious misperception among some people
including some US policymakers that all American evangelicals are
opposed to a two-state solution and creation of a new Palestinian state
that includes the vast majority of the West Bank [sic].
"Nothing could be further from the truth."
The writers said they support justice for both Israelis and Palestinian
Arabs.
"We hope this support will embolden you and your administration to
proceed confidently and forthrightly in negotiations with both sides in
the region."
Employing a favorite weapon of those wanting to disguise their
anti-Israel sentiments, the co-writers said it was "precisely as
evangelical Christians committed to the full teaching of the Scriptures
[that] we know that blessing and loving people (including Jews and the
present State of Israel) does not mean withholding criticism when it is
warranted."
Typically -- this "fairminded" criticism focuses on Israel's alleged
"theft" of "Arab" lands, its supposed "abuse" of Arabs' "human rights"
and its claimed "rebellion" against international dictates and
resolutions condemning the Jewish state.
The letter focused on Israel's need to "to remember, as she deals with
her neighbor Palestinians, the profound teaching on justice that the
Hebrew prophets proclaimed so forcefully as an inestimably precious
gift to the whole world."
There was no mention that the "Palestinians'" need to remember that
life is sacred, no call for their barbaric and repeated acts of
terrorism against the Jews they hated so much to be acknowledged and
repudiated.
The signatories include Bible college chancellors, theological seminary
presidents and professors as well as church pastors, leaders of
organizations like World Vision, Evangelicals for Social Action, the
Christian and Missionary Alliance, the Center of Christian-Muslim
Engagement for Peace and Justice, and the editor of Christianity Today.
Appealing to "historical honesty," they said it compelled them to
recognize that "both Israelis and Palestinians have legitimate rights
stretching back for millennia to the lands of Israel/Palestine."
But observers note that these professing Christians are being
historically dishonest.
Records prove that at most, Arabs of any kind can lay claim to a few
hundred years of family ties to this land. There has never in history
been a nation nor a country called Palestine.
The Jews' claim alone goes back nearly 4,000 years; they became a
nation here and they built a country here, not once but three times in
history.
The letter attempts to equate the victims of Arab violence with the
victims of Israel's response to that violence, and argues that, in
order to achieve peace, "both sides must give up some of their
competing, incompatible claims [and] accept each other's right to
exist."
To achieve that goal, the US "must provide robust leadership within the
Quartet to reconstitute the Middle East roadmap, whose full
implementation would guarantee the security of the State of Israel and
the viability of a Palestinian State."
On which authority they base their conviction is not clear.
What is clear is that these leaders appear unaware that their very
alliance with the God-rejecting forces of this world -- the fact that
they support a "solution" prescribed by a secular- humanistic 'global
village' -- serves as a clear warning to true Christians that they are
in error
Original
Source
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Leftist 'evangelicals:' Divide the Land of Israel
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