ÚNASE A NOSOTROS EL 20 Y 21 DE MAYO PARA LA CONFERENCIA DE RESTORE

María
De Muth

escocés
McKnight

Screenshot 2023-01-13 at 1.50.18 PM

Naghmeh
panahi

Reportando la Verdad.
Restauración de la Iglesia.

During Gaza War, Evangelicals Have Become Israel’s Best Friend

Por Bob Smietana y Yonat Shimron
evangelicals gaza
Freed hostage Sharon Alony Cunio, center, carries a poster of her husband, David Cunio, as she marches with other families of hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip, in Re’im, southern Israel, as they begin their march to Jerusalem calling for the release of hostages, Feb. 28, 2024. (AP Photo/Tsafrir Abayov)

For the last five months, Moshe Lavi has worn a medallion around his neck in honor of his brother-in-law Omri Miran, who was taken hostage by Hamas during the Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

Inscribed on the steel medallion, modeled after the dog tags worn by Israeli soldiers, is a simple drawing of a house with part of one wall missing. Inside the walls of the house is a heart.

“This represents the love that is in our family, but it’s incomplete,” said Lavi, a former Israel Defense Forces captain who was in Nashville last week to attend the annual National Religious Broadcasters meeting.

“It will be complete only when we return Omri home,” he said.

Lavi, who now works as a financial analyst, and other members of the Hostages and Missing Families Forum were among a large contingent of Israelis — including government officials — at the NRB gathering to meet with evangelical leaders, radio and television hosts, and other Christian supporters of Israel.

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George. To donate, haga clic aquí.

israel gaza
Omri Miran with his daughter, Roni. (Photo © Noa Sharvit)

They were there because evangelicals remain key allies for Israel in a time when the nation is losing support around the world. 

“Evangelicals as a bloc are about the only friends that Israel has,” said Joel Rosenberg,  a longtime political strategist, novelist and editor-in-chief of All Israel News, an evangelical pro-Israel news and commentary sitio.

Rosenberg, who became an Israeli citizen about a decade ago and identifies as a Jewish believer in Jesus, told media that he saw more Israelis at the NRB this year than in the past.

That’s in large part due to the close ties between Israel and evangelicals, who are more loyal than other groups, said Rosenberg, host of “The Rosenberg Report” for the Trinity Broadcasting Network.

“Where else are you going to find people who will listen, and then have a platform and a motive to act,” he said.

Evangelical Christians have long been the backbone of U.S. support for Israel and are arguably among Israel’s most ardent advocates. They travel to Israel in great numbers. They donate vast sums of money and advocate for Israel in Republican Party circles.

After the Oct. 7 Hamas attack in southern Israel killed an estimated 1,200, evangelicals jumped to defend Israel and raise money to rebuild its border communities. The Southern Baptist Convention’s public policy arm issued an “Evangelical Statement in Support of Israel.”

israel gaza
A Magen David Adom ambulance on display during the National Religious Broadcasters convention at the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center in Nashville, Tenn. (RNS photo/Bob Smietana)

Evangelist Franklin Graham donated 21 new ambulances to Israel’s EMS fleet, known as Magen David Adom, becoming the national nonprofit’s largest donor, said Catherine Reed, CEO of American Friends of Magen David Adom.

“The evangelical community loves Israel,” said Reed, who brought her team, including an Israeli ambulance and a series of short videos about the nonprofit, to the exhibition floor of the National Religious Broadcasters meeting as a way to thank evangelicals for their support.

Reminders of the Oct. 7 attacks were everywhere at the conference. Not far from the exhibitors hall, conference attendees could watch “Bear Witness,” a three-minute video of the Hamas attacks using virtual headsets. The exhibit where the video was being shown was flanked by Israeli flags and Nashville Metro police officers providing added security.

A few floors up, a 45-minute version of the video — taken from footage filmed by Hamas — was being shown to groups of pastors, broadcasters and other attendees. After watching the footage, the groups heard from families of hostages and IDF officers. The videos have also been shown around the country to build support for Israel después the attacks.

There is good reason for Israel to woo evangelicals. They are mightier in numbers than Jews, said Dov Waxman, professor of Israel studies at the University of California, Los Angeles.

“Many people, when they think about Zionists in America, think about Jewish Americans,” said Waxman. “But in actual fact, there are many, many more Christian Zionists than there are Jewish Zionists in the United States.”

trump prayer maga evangelicals
A man wears a “Make America Pray Again” hat at the National Religious Broadcasters convention at the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center, Feb. 22, 2024, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)

Exactly how many is hard to estimate. Mordechai Inbari, a professor of religion at the University of North Carolina, Pembroke, found of the estimated 80 million U.S. evangelicals, between 50% to 70%  support Israel. 

By contrast, there are close to 8 million Jews in the U.S. Those Jews tend to be far more liberal and vote Democratic. Far-left U.S. Jews have been among the most passionate critics of the war in Gaza, calling for a cease-fire in petitions and protests.

Christian support for Israel has often been rooted in beliefs about the end times. For some evangelicals, the creation of the state of Israel in 1948, and its ability to capture the West Bank and Gaza in the 1967 Six-Day War, reinforced the belief that Israel is the culmination of prophecies recorded in the Bible and may presage the second coming of Jesus.

However, that belief seems to hold less sway in the current conflict than larger claims about God’s promises to Israel.

“The most common argument right now would be that God made a covenant with Abraham and his offspring and this is why they need to support Israel,” said Inbari, the co-author with Kirill Bumin of “Christian Zionism in the Twenty-First Century.”

During NRB, several speakers cited a passage from the Book of Genesis where God tells Abraham, one of the patriarchs of Israel, “I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse.” A similar claim is found in the Book of Numbers.

But younger evangelicals are more skeptical about ties to Israel and have become more supportive of Palestinians. In three waves of a survey that examined evangelical views of Israel, Inbari and Bumin found that among evangelicals aged 19-29, support for Israel dropped by more than half, from a high of 69% in 2018 to 29% in July 2021.

With declining evangelical support among young evangelicals and growing global condemnation of Israel’s ongoing military operation in Gaza, where the death toll is reported to be approaching 30,000, Israeli leaders are working to strengthen evangelicals’ advocacy for their country.

“Firming up support for Israel among the evangelical community is really essential, and (Israeli leaders) see that as playing a key role in maintaining U.S. government support for Israel,” Waxman said.

israel gaza
A panel on Israel during the National Religious Broadcasters convention at the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center in Nashville, Tenn. (RNS photo/Bob Smietana)

Laurie Cardoza-Moore, a longtime activist for Israel based near Nashville and founder of the pro-Israel group Proclaiming Justice to the Nations, spent last week interviewing survivors of the Hamas attacks and other Israelis for her “Focus on Israel” podcast and connecting with supporters at a booth in NRB’s massive exhibit hall.

The images from the Oct. 7 attack were shocking, said Cardoza-Moore. But the stories of survivors bring the attack closer to home.

“When you meet the people and you hear the stories — that’s what changes people’s hearts,” she said.

Cardoza-Moore, a longtime presence at NRB, began her pro-Israel work in the early 2000s, spearheading a Tennessee resolution in support of Israel in 2002.

Evangelicals, she said, have a responsibility to defend both Israel and their Jewish neighbors.

“Antisemitism never goes away,” she said. “We need to protect our Jewish brethren — and we as Christians have a biblical duty to do that, according to the Scriptures.”

Luke Moon, deputy director of the Philos Project, which promotes “positive Christian engagement in the Near East,” said evangelicals need to be more intentional and clearer in their support of Israel. Moon, who had a booth at the NRB, said he recently attended a major youth conference where he set up a sign that said, “We are the Zionist generation.”

The same sign, he said, was set up at the NRB booth.

For years, the nonprofit has taken Christian leaders on education trips to Israel — something that is on hold due to the war. The work now has shifted to building solidarity with Israel.

Moon said the Oct. 7 attacks revealed that Philos has a great deal of work to do.

“I thought the world of allies to the Jewish people was bigger,” he said.

israel gaza
Tal Heinrich. (Courtesy photo)

Tal Heinrich, a long-term Israeli journalist turned spokesperson for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said evangelical leaders are allies who share the same values as Israel’s leaders. They both have “moral clarity” about why Israel is fighting Hamas, said Heinrich. And evangelicals are willing to back up their belief in the importance of Israel with action — which is exactly what Israel needs at this moment.

“We will not stop fighting for a lack of support. But it’s a nice thing to have — knowing that you are not alone,” she said, adding that evangelical broadcasters have a role to play at this moment.

“We need you to speak the truth,” she said. “Don’t let anyone forget what happened. Don’t let anyone forget why Israel is fighting.”

For hostages’ family members, like Lavi, the goal is more personal. They want to make sure the more than 130 remaining hostages are not forgotten as the war drags on and political pressure for a cease-fire grows. Lavi said he hoped the evangelical leaders and broadcasters he met with would share the stories about those still missing as widely as possible. 

“We try to ensure that this remains at the top of the agenda for decision-makers,” he said.

He compared the medallion he wears as a reminder of his brother-in-law to the fictional ring of power featured in the Lord of the Rings books. That ring became a heavy burden for whoever carried it.

Likewise, bearing witness to the hostages is a burden for families — one Lavi hopes will be lifted when hostages like his brother-in-law come home.

“I wear it every day,” he said, referring to the medallion. “I can’t wait to take it off.”

Bob Smietana y Yonat Shimron son reporteros nacionales de Religion News Service.

COMPARTIR ESTE:

¡OBTÉN ACTUALIZACIONES POR CORREO ELECTRÓNICO!

¡Manténgase en contacto con Julie y reciba actualizaciones en su bandeja de entrada!

No te preocupes, no te enviaremos spam.

Más para explorar
discusión

12 Respuestas

  1. Watched a Rabbi Jonathan Cahn you tube last night and completely agreed with his statement – “True Christians Love Israel”
    Sadly many, it appears, of the Reformed faiths support the Palestinians presuming them to be Christians. I was of the same false presumption for decades as a member of the RCA living in the Holland MI area. However, only 2% maximum of Palestinians are Christians.
    Thankful – and to God be the glory – that the Holland newspaper graciously prints my letters of support for Israel.

      1. God’s promises were conditional. Based on honoring God through faith in Him (now through faith in the divine Son Jesus Christ) and Christain love for our fellowman. One must therefore ask, how does unquestionable support of the actions of the secular state of Israel honor God and project such love?
        “A time is coming when you will worship the Father neither on the mountain nor in Jerusalem…God is Spirit and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.”
        “A person is a Jew who is one inwardly, and circumcision is circumcision of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the written code. Such a person’s praise is not from people, but from God”

      2. I don’t support Palistinians because they’re christians, although some of them are. I support Palistinians because they’re humans. I also support Israelis because they’re human. What the State of Israel is doing to the citizens of Palestine is horrific and indefensible. What Hamas did to the citizens of Israel is horrific and indefensible. The people are not their leadership, and no citizens deserve to be killed (or in the case of Palistinians, anhilated) by corrupt governments.

  2. Israel is God’s people; not the dirt in the middle east. Not the Rothschild cabal govmt. that pretends to be Hebrews who love & obey The Almighty. Praise God, the full truth on all of this will be coming out during these last days of revelation (the reveal). I do not stand with anyone who thinks it’s right to kill innocent people & to take away their country, their land & homes using the excuse of killing terrorists. How many there are who call themselves Jews yet are in reality, the synagogue of satan. May the Lord bring comfort to all the innocent who have suffered & may He soon bring them justice also.

    1. You will find though, it’s the ones who call themselves “Jews” that are of the synagogues of satan. There are actually more followers of Christ in Palestine than in the state of Israel- in which you can actually go to prison for proselytization in Israel. So, you tell me, who is of synagogues of satan.

      You have to admit, there’s a massive agenda behind suppressing anyone and anything that disagrees with the prevailing view of pro-Israel and labelled as “anti-Jews” or pro-Palestine.

      Palestinians are most likely also of “Israelite” lineage if you can actually trace DNA origin. Being pro-Palestine is not synonymous with being pro-Hamas.

      Not all “Jews” are of Avraham’s seed; and not all of Avraham’s seed subscribe to being religion or ethnicity of “Jews”.

      May I remind you that Yaakov ben Avraham had 12 sons (and 1 daughter) from which 13 tribes of Israel originated. Jews are only a very small part-mainly of Judah the 4th son, and sprinkle of Levi (3rd son) and Benjamin (12th son). But who is to say that most of current inhabitants of the physical land of Israel are really ethnic Jews?

      Also, did you know that there were gentile converts to YHVH of Israel dating back to when they left Egypt? Oh yea…..the mixture has been happening since time immemorial. It is virtually impossible to determine who is the original Israel or Jews.

      This is why it is written: In Christ, there is no longer Jews or gentile for ALL are one in Christ. In Christ, we are all of household of Israel.

  3. The problem is that most evangelical in this country and beyond do NOT KNOW their scripture.

    1948 Israel is an invention of man; and certainly incomparable (and incompatible) to biblical Israel. This current state of Israel is not biblically supported NOR did it fulfil any biblical prophecy. The Israel that fulfilled prophecy was the post-exilic Israel that returned from Babylonian captivity circa 500s BCE. Read Nehemiah, Ezra, Haggai, Zechariah for details.

    Firstly: the purpose of the Jews that returned from Babylonian exile was to fulfil the prophesy of Yeshua, the messiah who will be born of Davidic lineage of Judah, in the city of David, Jerusalem. Now, that the prophesy of Yeshua’s birth has been fulfilled, the Romans completely destroyed the temple, with final dispersion of Jews. The next re-gathering will be of ALL house of Israel including the 10 lost tribes, along with gentile believers; in the Messianic era.

    Secondly: 1948 Israel is a liberal secular democracy with follow liberal constitutional laws; NOT a theocracy that follows the Torah laws. According to scriptures, adhering to the Torah laws is ( will be) THE primary identity of re-constituted Israel according to numerous scriptures. THIS has not happened, and will only happen WHEN Christ returns for HIS millennial kingdom. When ALL mankind will follow Torah.

    I suspect that Palestinians are actually the real Jews. Why? Their sufferings past and present bear remarkable resemblance to what biblical Israel endured right from Egyptian oppression, thru various gentile nations, then Assyrians, then Babylonians, Persians, then Greco- Romans.

    So, Yea, you do the math. Majority is usually wrong. I say, evangelicals are on the “wrong side”.

  4. My dear mother told me as far back as I can remember to always be good to Jewish people because they were Gods chosen people. She shared stories from history of all the good things they did for the world. We were Catholic. Well, 36 years ago I married a brilliant man from NYC who was Jewish. He asked me once if I would convert while we were dating. I said “no! I could never turn my back on Jesus.”His family was horrible to him, to me, our daughter. I shared the gospel with them. My husband sent them a Messianic Jewish Bible after he accepted Christ about 20 years ago which I think they threw in the trash. I never would have dreamed the nightmare that would ensue when we wed. They hated that I was a Christian. On the other hand my best friend was Jewish and like a second mom to me. She’s 94 now!

  5. I grew up in a VERY white environment (one of 4 Black kids in my entire high school, the only Black family in my neighborhood) in the Bible belt South, and I remember the “commotion” when a Jewish family moved into the neighborhood. When it was clear the kids would also be attending my school, my mom said, “Have their back. Remember, antisemitism and racism are intertwined; people who dislike Jewish people usually don’t like us either!” I ended up befriending the daughter who was in my class, and to this day we laugh at how her father told her something similar: “Look out for them. We are a package deal: people who don’t like Black people don’t like us either!”
    (To this day, I find this to be true: when I hear an antisemitic trope, I know something against Black people will also roll off their lips too)
    And while I admit to having limited knowledge of the complex history of the MIddle East, I find it problematic that anything outside of 100% support for any and everything Israel does is labeled as anti-Israel or antisemitic. (Then again, we do this when it comes to our own country; any questioning that implies something other than 100% support of all US foreign or military policy is labeled as unpatriotic). While true “peace in the Middle East” will only come from God, I don’t like how these labels are shutting down any critical thinking or constructive dialogue about the tragedy we are watching unfold.

Deja una respuesta

El Informe Roys busca fomentar el diálogo reflexivo y respetuoso. Con ese fin, el sitio requiere que las personas se registren antes de comenzar a comentar. Esto significa que no se permitirán comentarios anónimos. Además, se eliminarán todos los comentarios con blasfemias, insultos y/o un tono desagradable.
 
Artículos MÁS RECIENTES
Artículos MÁS populares
es_MXSpanish

Donar

Hola. Vemos que este es el tercer artículo de este mes que ha encontrado que vale la pena leer. ¡Estupendo! ¿Consideraría hacer una donación deducible de impuestos para ayudar a nuestros periodistas a continuar informando la verdad y restaurar la iglesia?

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George.