Self-Evident
The United States of America was born in the radical conviction that all
men are created equal, and endowed by God with certain rights:
- "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are
endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."
- (Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776)
|
|
When the founding fathers say "all men," they mean "all
men," not some sub-set of men such as U. S. citizens. It is not only
Americans who are created by God, but "all men."
Christian Zionists do not believe either that all men are created equal
or that they are endowed by Nature and Nature's God with political rights.
That portion of humanity which are Palestinian Arabs, whether Christian
or Muslim, they believe enjoy no rights, at least none that need be respected
by the world community. Though other populations, created equal, share
the right to national self-determination, this group alone has no such right.
'Unamerican' is one way to describe this view. 'Unbiblical' is another, because God's word says: "Then Peter
opened his mouth, and said, Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons:. . . " (Acts 10:34).

God's Helpers
"Why should we know prophecy? I'll tell you one of the most important reasons is because it will help
shape even political policy of our nation, because we must be careful not to be trying to implement things that are against
the very predicted plan of God." ('Why Study Prophecy,' video by Hal Lindsey, excerpted in 'The Rapture: Biblical Fact...Or
Left Behind Fiction?,' Lighthouse World Ministries).
Prophecy students in the past mostly sat like spectators in the grandstand,
observing and commenting on the action below. Those who look to the final
judgment and the descent of the new Jerusalem see the futility of supposing
any human hand could help or hinder such manifestly supernatural events.
Yet Christian Zionists pursue an active political agenda, which they justify by their system of prophecy. They are a standing
lobby for war. Liberals are the "enemy that hides in the shadows, doesn't play by any of the rules, and is determined to use
any means to bring about our literal annihilation." (Hal Lindsey,
quoted at Biblio.com.) Prophecy
teachers adopt the alarmist tone of contemporary grudge politics, warning their listeners they better do something quick. . .
- ". . . Golda's words echo with haunting clarity. 'The Arabs can fight, and lose, and return to fight
another day. Israel can only lose once.' Let us pray that Israel has learned a vital lesson before it is too late. May they boot out
the present appeasement minded government and get into power someone like Binyamin Netanyahu."
- (Hal Lindsey, www.hallindseyoracle.com).
|
|
or else. . . or else. . . or else what? This group believes the contemporary
state of Israel to be the fulfillment of Bible prophecy. On the one hand
they boast that God Himself fights for Israel:
"No nation in the world can match the defensive force guarding the
State of Israel. . .The Lord stands watch in the darkest night with an
eye trained on the nation of Israel and, more specifically, Jerusalem.
Those who fight with Israel fight with Him." (John Hagee, 'Final Dawn
Over Jerusalem, pp. 19-20).
Yet somehow they also fear that, should Israel's leaders prove insufficiently intransigent, or American tax-payers
balk, it will all fall apart. Their founder, John Nelson Darby, was likewise disposed to see events getting away from God,
portraying the Church as a last-minute improvisation after God's 'Plan A' had failed. This way of looking at things is not Biblical.
The Bible emphasizes God's freedom, foresight and sovereignty over human affairs:
"Known unto God are all his works from the beginning of the world."
(Acts 15:18).
"But our God is in heaven; He does whatever He pleases." (Psalm
115:3).
"Behold, the nations are as a drop of a bucket, and are counted as
the small dust of the balance: behold, he takes up -*the isles as a very
little thing." (Isaiah 40:15).
"For they did not gain possession of the land by their own sword,
nor did their own arm save them; but it was Your right hand, Your arm,
and the light of Your countenance, because You favored them. . .For I will
not trust in my bow, nor shall my sword save me. But You have saved us
from our enemies, and have put to shame those who hated us. In God we boast
all day long, and praise Your name forever. Selah." (Psalm 44:3-8).
"I have made the earth, the man and the beast that are on the ground,
by My great power and by My outstretched arm, and have given it to whom
it seemed proper to Me." (Jeremiah 27:5).
"Then Job answered the LORD: I know that you can do all things, and
that no purpose of yours can be thwarted."(Job 42:1-2).
Does God, before whom the nations are as dust, require the assistance of
these eager helpers to perform His wonders? And whose agenda are they advancing
when they promote perpetual war? Not God's, and certainly not America's.

Mother Ship
Dispensationalism begins with the premise that nation Israel has in some
way been 'cheated.' The dispensationalists posit the millenium as a time
for the fulfillment of Bible promises which they claim remain as yet unmet:
promises of this-worldly well-being, promises of Israel's national glory.
But if anyone were to ask the 'coloreds' under South Africa's old apartheid
regime whether they felt blessed to be, not at the bottom of the social
pyramid, but one rung up, they would hardly describe this experience as
glorious or blessed. It stings to be a second-class citizen, and it is
very small consolation that there are others even lower.
Hovering above the this-worldly Jerusalem in which the Jews are enjoying
their national felicity during the millenium, according to some dispensationalists,
is a space-ship called the heavenly Jerusalem:
"This view contemplates the heavenly Jerusalem as in existence during
the millennium over the earth as the habitation of the resurrected saints,
and is in contrast to the city of Jerusalem located on the earth. . .It
provides a clear distinction between resurrected saints who inhabit the
New Jerusalem and the millennial saints on the earth who will inhabit the
millennial earth. . .Though the major difficulty of the relationship of
resurrected saints to those who are still in their natural bodies in the
millennium is explained by the residence of the resurrected saints in the
heavenly Jerusalem, Scriptures afford several instances in which there
will be some relation of resurrected saints to those in the millennial
earth. . .It is further promised believers who participate in the first
resurrection that they 'shall reign with him a thousand years' (Rev 20:6)."
(The Millennial Kingdom, John F. Walvoord, pp. 328-329)
So while the Jews are enjoying their earthly felicity down in the lower Jerusalem, living to a ripe old age
before dying, the Christians, who never die, enjoy reigning over them. It is far from obvious why the dispensationalists
accuse those who do not share their views of 'anti-semitism.'
While it's distressing enough to watch the dispensationalists assign to
Israel a second-class national destiny, it also leaves one wondering. Where
the Christians are is where Jesus is, because the Bible says, "And
thus we shall always be with the Lord." (1 Thessalonians 4:17). After
the resurrection, our paths do not diverge from His. So is He on the Mother
Ship with His people, or down consoling the mortal sinners below, whose
millenial fate it is to watch others of like nature with themselves enjoy
greater felicity?

Red Heifer
Radio listeners nowadays hear often about a purported plan to rebuild the
temple at Jerusalem. As a practical matter this project, although ostensibly
Jewish, is funded by dispensationalist Christians. The New Testament teaches
that the temple sacrifices of the Old Testament were ordained to foreshadow
Jesus Christ's once and for all sacrifice. These animal sacrifices are
not understood by Christians to retain any independent value once the reality
to which they pointed has come: "For it is not possible that the blood
of bulls and goats could take away sins." (Hebrews 10:4). It is difficult
to imagine how even nominal Christians could fund a project premised on
the notion that the blood of Jesus is insufficient, given that the Bible says,
"Of how much worse punishment, do you suppose, will he be thought
worthy who has trampled the Son of God underfoot, counted the blood of
the covenant by which he was sanctified a common thing, and insulted the
Spirit of grace?" (Hebrews 10:29).

Liberation of Iraq
The dispensationalists undeniably facilitated the American invasion of
Iraq. They have been demonizing the former head of the Iraqi state for
years. Although Saddam Hussein never had any plausible connection to Bible
prophecy, these writers had portrayed him as representing more than merely
mortal evil for some time:
"It is difficult to explain the bizarre behavior of Saddam Hussein
without thinking him quite possibly demon-possessed. . .Religiously, Saddam
may give lip service to Muhammad and act like a devoted Muslim, but there
is strong indication that he is actually a Satanist. . .Saddam Hussein's
abnormal hatred for the Jews, Jesus Christ, His followers, and anyone else
who would stand in the way of his goal to conquer the world, might be be
understood by demonic possession--a virtual foretaste of the Antichrist
to follow, who will be indwelt by Satan himself." (Tim LaHaye and
Jerry B. Jenkins, Are We Living in the End Times?, pp. 139-142).
This book is copyrighted 1999. The dispensationalists were banging the
drum for this war before Mr. Bush ever came to office.
To my knowledge, Mr. Bush has never stated whether he subscribes to the
dispensational viewpoint. In this editorial, Hal Lindsey seems to categorize
Mr. Bush as an adherent of 'replacement theology:'
"There is a lot of discussion about George Bush and whether or not
he is a 'real' Christian, as if that in some way had a bearing on whether
or not they will vote for him. . .That is not to say he isn't a truly born-again
Christian, because, as I've argued in the past, I don't know. One can't
assume he isn't because he adheres to replacement theology unless one assumes
Protestant Christianity doesn't contain any true Christians, since most
mainstream Protestant denominations do, too." (Hal Lindsey, 'The difficult
question of George W. Bush,' March 11, 2004, WorldNet).
(By 'replacement theology' dispensationalists are referring to the concept
of the church as the "Israel of God" (Galatians 6:16). Dispensationalists
do not think the church, both Jew and Gentile, 'replaced' unbelieving Israel
as God's salvation community; indeed many of them, who apportion the land
to Israel and heaven to the Christians, do not think Israel ever was a
salvation community.) What, if anything, Mr. Bush thinks on these topics
is unknown. Certainly though he must be grateful to the dispensationalists
for demonizing his enemy, because otherwise you have to pay people to do that.
As to the Christian Zionists, when reminded that the policy they promoted
has led to disaster for their country, they chirp up, 'See? The end times
are upon us!' Success is good, failure even better.

Racialism
To the dispensationalists, the key to the question 'Who is a Jew?' is racial
purity. According to these authors, not the thousands of believing Jews
who established the church in the first century, but the unbelieving synagogue
which established itself in opposition to Jesus' claim as Messiah, are
the true Jews and heirs of Abraham, because the latter have retained their
racial purity whereas the former succumbed to race-mixing:
"America is a good example of what happens when Englishmen, Swedes,
Poles, Frenchmen and others live together. Slowly but surely there is a
blending of the nationalities and races until a new strain emerges. Many
countries, such as Mexico and the South American nations, have such a blending
in just three or four hundred years until it is difficult to detect the
original ancestry. The Jews provide the one international exception. Although
scattered all over the world these last 1,800 years, exposed to practically
every genetic strain that exists, they are still a people with ethnic social,
and religious similarities which no one can fail to identify." (Tim
LaHaye, 'The Beginning of the End,' p. 44).
The first expositors of this system can only have derived their preoccupation with
racial purity from old-fashioned, nineteenth-century racism; they cannot
have derived it from the Bible. Certainly not from the New Testament, which says,
"There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free,
there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus.
And if you are Christ’s, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according
to the promise." (Galatians 3:28-29).
But neither did they derive it from the Old Testament. In the Old Testament,
the bottom line on who did and who did not belong to the community was,
not biologic descent, but faith. Those who clung to the God of Israel were
Israel, even Ruth the Moabitess:
“But Ruth said:
'Entreat me not to leave you,
Or to turn back from following after you;
For wherever you go, I will go;
And wherever you lodge, I will lodge;
Your people shall be my people,
And your God, my God.'” (Ruth 1:16).
The dispensationalist assumption that the true Israel follows racial descent
is not even faithful to the Old Testament, much less the New. Neither is
it found in pre-Talmudic Judaism. While the temple still stood Judaism
was an actively proselytizing religion. Later, after suffering defeat and
dispersal at the hands of pagan Rome, Judaism turned inward. At this later
period the accusation surfaces in the Talmud that proselytes are not really
Jews, nor on a footing of equality with those who are Jews by racial descent.
It is unhistorical to project that later belief into the New Testament,
and odder still for Christians to believe it. Many thousands of Jews heard
the gospel and believed: "And the Lord added to the church daily those
who were being saved." (Acts 2:47). But the dispensationalists insist
the true Jews are those who do not believe,-- even atheists and agnostics, who abound in the present day state of
Israel. This is an inversion of the Bible.
The apostles throw the gate, which was always open, open even wider: “For
there is no distinction between Jew and Greek, for the same Lord over all
is rich to all who call upon Him. 'For whoever calls on the name of the
LORD shall be saved.'” (Romans 10:12-13). At the present time, reform Judaism
does not require circumcision of male converts. Yet the dispensationalists
regard these as real Jews, while converts made by the apostles are, in
their eyes, illegitimate! The Lord broke down the wall, "For He Himself
is our peace, who has made both one, and has broken down the middle wall
of separation. . ." (Ephesians 2:14), which the dispensationalists
industriously build back up again. If there is now, as the Bible says,
no distinction between Jew and Greek, then where is there room for their
system? And if they do not believe the New Testament, then by virtue of
what are they Christians rather than Jews, or more precisely Jewish wanna-bes?

|