Zion's Christian Soldiers
Conservative
Christian Says Founder Of Islam Set A Bad Example (CBS
60 Minutes)
June 8,
2003 (Original transcript: http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7380256n)
(CBS) This week, Israel's Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon told President Bush that he would start to dismantle some
illegal Jewish settlements on the West Bank as part of an agreement with the
new Palestinian Prime Minister.
That news has already alarmed those Jewish settlers -- and ultra-Zionist
Israelis who believe that the Jewish State should control all
of the Biblical Jewish homeland.
But they're not the only group that feels that way. So do Fundamentalist
Christian Evangelicals who make up the largest single religious grouping in the
United States. Correspondent Bob Simon first reported this story on
October 6, 2002.
What's the number one item on the agenda of the Christian Right? Abortion? School Prayer? No and No. Believe it or not, what's most
important to a lot of conservative Christians is the Jewish State. Israel: Its size, its strength, and its survival. Why?
There is the alliance between America and Israel in the war on Islamic terror.
But it goes deeper. For Christians who interpret the bible in a literal
fashion, Israel has a crucial role to play in bringing on the Second Coming of
Christ.
Last fall, supporters of the Christian Coalition gathered on the Mall in
Washington to express their faith and to lobby the administration. The rally
was organized by the Christian Coalition, which wants to make sure that the
Bush Administration sees the struggle in the Middle East between Jews and
Muslims their way - the Christian way.
At one congregation in Colorado, it’s Israel Awareness Day. But this is not a
Jewish congregation. They are all Christians. Not only are they holding these
pep rallies all across America, they’re also streaming here to Israel, to the
dangerous streets of Jerusalem to express their undying devotion.
American Christian Zionists say they are now a more important source of support
for Israel than American Jews or the traditional Jewish lobby.
“It is my belief that the Bible Belt in
America is Israel’s only safety belt right now,” says Rev. Jerry Falwell, one of the leaders of
the Christian Right. That’s the bulk of Evangelical Christians; Falwell claims to speak for all of them.
“There are 70 million of us,” he
says. “And if there’s one thing that brings us together quickly it’s whenever
we begin to detect our government becoming a little anti-Israel.”
Falwell began to detect just that in April 2002 when President Bush called on Israel to
withdraw its tanks from Palestinian towns on the West Bank. So Falwell shot off a letter of protest to the White House,
which was followed by a hundred thousand e-mails from Christian
conservatives. Israel
did not move its tanks. Mr. Bush did not ask again.
“There’s nothing that would bring the
wrath of the Christian public in this country down on this government like
abandoning or opposing Israel in a critical matter,” Falwell
says. The “Christian public” is, he says, Mr. Bush’s core constituency.
“I really believe when the chips are
down Ariel Sharon can trust George Bush to do the right thing every time,”
says Falwell.
Prime Minister Sharon can apparently trust the Christian Evangelicals to do the
right thing too. They treated him like a
rock star when they flocked to Jerusalem last fall to celebrate the Jewish
Feast of Tabernacles.
What propels them? Why do they love
Israel so much? The return of the Jews
to their ancient homeland is seen by Evengelicals as
a precondition for the Second Coming of Christ. Therefore, when the Jewish
state was created in 1948 they saw it as a sign.
Israel’s conquest of Jerusalem and the West Bank in 1967 also deepened their
excitement and heightened their anticipation. And today’s war between Jews and
Arabs was also prophesied, they say. They’ve
seen it all before – in the pages of the Bible.
“The Bible does not contain the word of
God,” says Ed McAteer. “Listen to me closely. The Bible is the word of God.” McAteer is known as
the Godfather of the Christian Right. He’s a former Colgate
marketing executive from Memphis, and a founder of the Moral Majority.
McAteer believes that the current situation is the
beginning of the final battle. “I believe that we are seeing prophecy
unfold so rapidly and dramatically and wonderfully and, without exaggerating,
makes me breathless.”
But he’s not the only one. Countless millions of Americans
are reading a series of novels called “Left Behind.” These novels are topping
bestseller lists all over the country and they’re being made into movies. They
chronicle apocalyptic times, and the setting is the 21st century, complete with
war planes and TV correspondents.
However, the plot is ripped from the pages of the Bible, so it all winds up
here in Israel where, according to the Book of Revelations, the final battle in
the history of the future will be fought on an ancient battlefield in northern
Israel called Armageddon. It will follow seven years of tribulation during
which the earth will be shaken by such disasters that previous human history
will seem like a day in the country. The blood will rise as high as a horse’s
bridle at Armageddon, before Christ triumphs to begin his 1,000-year rule.
And the Jews?
Well,
two-thirds of them will have been wiped out by now. But the
survivors will accept Jesus at last.
“The Jews die or convert. As a Jew,
I can’t feel very comfortable with the affections of somebody who looks forward
to that scenario,” says Gershom Gorenberg,
who knows that scenario well.
Gorenberg is the author of the “End of Days,” a book
about those Christian evangelicals who choose to read the Bible literally.
“They don’t love real Jewish people. They love us as characters in their story,
in their play, and that’s not who we are, and we never auditioned for that
part, and the play is not one that ends up good for us.”
“If you listen to the drama they’re describing, essentially it’s a five-act play in which the Jews disappear in the
fourth act.”
But if that makes Gershom Gorenberg
feel uncomfortable, these Christians say it’s only because he doesn’t
understand how deeply they love him.
“The Jews need conversion,” says Kay
Arthur. “They need to know that the Messiah is coming. And the Bible tells us
what’s going to happen.” Arthur heads an organization called Precept Ministries
in Chattanooga, Tenn. She brings thousands of
pilgrims to the Holy Land.
The Christian fundamentalists believe the only Israelis who are really
listening to God are the hard line Jewish settlers who live on the West Bank
and Gaza and refuse to move. The Christians trudge up to these settlements as
if they were making pilgrimages to holy shrines. That’s because they and the
settlers share a core conviction.
They believe that God gave the land of Israel to the Jewish people. “Every
grain of sand, every grain of sand between the Dead Sea, the Jordan River, and,
and the Mediterranean Sea belongs to the Jews,” says McAteer.
This includes the West Bank and Gaza.
What about the three million Palestinians who live on the West Bank and Gaza? McAteer suggests the bulk of them could be cleansed from
this God-given real estate and moved to some Arab country. Nothing can come
between the Jews and their land.
In fact, many fundamentalists believe
that when Prime Minister Rabin signed the Oslo accords and offered to trade
land for peace, it was not only a mistake, it was a sin.
“They were going against the word of God. You cannot go against the word of
God. And I believe that God stopped it ... by the things that happened.” says
Arthur. She hints that God punished
Rabin by assassinating him. “I think that God did not want that Oslo Accord
to go through.”
“God save us from these people,” says political analyst Yossi
Alfer, who served 12 years in Israel’s intelligence
agency, the Mossad. Later, he became Israel Director of the American Jewish
Committee.
Says Alfer: “When you see what these people are encouraging Israel and the U.S. Administration to
do that is, ignore the Palestinians,
if not worse, if not kick them out, expand the settlements to the greatest
extent possible, they are leading us into a
scenario of out and out disaster.”
But many American Jewish leaders who used to shun support from the Christian Right
have changed their minds. Abe Foxman, head of the
Anti-Defamation League, accepts their support.
“On this specific issue on this day we come together. And what is the issue?
The issue is fighting terrorism,” Foxman says.
That is precisely what the Bush Administration and the Israeli Government have
been saying since September 11, that they are allies in the war on terror. But
the Christian Fundamentalists go further. They say it is not just an alliance
between nations but between religions.
“A lot of Muslims feel these days that Christians and Jews are getting together
and ganging up on them,” Simon said to Falwell.
“That’s true. I’m sorry, that’s true. I hope it will cease to be so. But I
think that is the fact right now,” says Falwell.
Falwell believes most Muslims want to live in peace
but, he says, the lines have been drawn. Christians and Jews are on one side,
Muslims on the other and, he says, those lines were drawn more than a thousand
years ago.
“You wrote an approving piece recently about a book called ‘Unveiling Islam,’”
says Simon to Falwell. “And you, the authors of that
book wrote, ‘The Muslim who commits acts of violence in jihad does so with the
approval of Mohammed.’ Do you believe that?"
“I do,” says Fallwell. “I think Mohammed was a
terrorist. I read enough of the history of his life, written by both Muslims
and non-Muslims, that he was a violent man, a man of war.”
“So, in the same way that Moses provided the ultimate example for the Jews and
same way that Jesus provided the ultimate example for Christians, Mohammed
provided the ultimate example for Muslims and he was a terrorist,” asks Simon.
“In my opinion,” says Fallwell. “And I do believe
that - Jesus set the example for love, as did Moses. And I think that Mohammed
set an opposite example.”
What frightens Alfer
is that he hears much of Falwell’s world view
reflected in the words of the Bush Administration.
“When we hear expressions like “the evil ones,” this kind of black and white
view of good guys, the bad guys,” says Alfer.
But as long as Jews are the good guys in this representation, this is good for
the Jews, isn’t it?
“It’s not good for the Jews. It’s not
good for the Jews," says Alfer. We have to
get God out of this conflict if we’re going to have any chance to survive as a
healthy, secure Jewish state."
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