-Caveat Lector-

The Gospel According to Joe

by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.



Joseph Farah, editor of WorldNetDaily.com, recently set his sights on
former Illinois Congressman Paul Findley, who has written and lectured
widely on the subject of Israel, the Israeli lobby, and American foreign
policy. Farah hasn�t quite mastered that really complicated distinction
between explaining an event and excusing an event. Because Findley
points to our country�s unswerving support for Israel as a source of
ongoing irritation and frustration in the Muslim world, he is, in Farah�s
view, guilty of "blaming America" for the September 11 attacks.

Findley, says Farah, "shares that view with Iraqi President Saddam Hussein,
Syrian President Bashar Assad, the mullahs of Iran, the sheikhs of Hamas
and the fanatical terrorists of Hezbollah."

Subtle, Mr. Farah isn�t. By the end of the article, Congressman Findley is
being described as an "anti-Semite," though Farah has done exactly nothing
to substantiate the charge. (Shocking and unheard of, I know, to see
reckless charges of anti-Semitism being thrown around.) And he�s
apparently drawing from the National Organization for Women�s playbook:
You�re against abortion? Well, so are Syrian President Bashar Assad, the
mullahs of Iran, the sheikhs of Hamas�.

According to Farah, one of Findley�s sins is that he "thinks most Americans
don�t understand the complexities of the Middle East debate because they
have been hoodwinked and deceived." Now no one in his right mind denies
the existence of an Israeli lobby, least of all the Israeli lobby itself, which
has repeatedly and publicly taken great pride in its achievements on behalf
of Israel. If I wanted to open up that can of worms, I could cite a
practically endless series of quotations from prominent members of that
lobby, in which they openly and proudly boast of their influence. But I
trust most readers will appreciate that Farah is simply being disingenuous
here.

Moreover, it�s just a fact that most Americans don�t understand the
complexities of the Middle East, regardless of the reason why. They just
don�t. Ask ten ordinary Americans what Zionism is, and you�ll get a blank
stare from at least nine. Ask them about the terms of the UN partition plan
of 1947, and you may as well be speaking Chinese. I find this routinely in my
classes, even in the evening courses I teach, where the average age is
about 38 and the skill level is fairly high. These are successful adults
looking to take extra courses or earn an additional degree. And by and
large they don�t know a thing about the history of the Middle East.

Farah proceeds to give us a point-by-point explanation of why evangelical
Christians support Israel so steadfastly, and why they are right to do so
from a biblical point of view. Consider several of these:

The strong evangelical church in America can read the Bible and see that
the Jews� only historic home is in Israel.
Most Christians understand that Jesus was a Jew who lived in a Jewish
state, albeit one under the colonial rule of the Roman Empire.
They understand that God chose to reveal Himself to the Jewish people
and the nation of Israel.
They believe God made certain promises to the nation of Israel and that
today�s Jewish state is a manifestation of those promises.

It�s all very simple, says Farah.

Here�s the problem with Farah�s view: no one in the first 1800 years of
Christianity would have recognized it. Why do we hear nothing from the
early Fathers, or indeed even from Martin Luther or John Calvin, about the
Jewish people�s alleged right to return to Palestine? Indeed, if Farah�s
points are as obvious as he implies, why did no one within the Christian
tradition draw Zionist conclusions from them for 1800 years?

For that matter, the Jews themselves would not have recognized Farah�s
position. The idea that the Jews� return to the land could be hastened
through human effort rather than brought about miraculously at a time of
God�s choosing is not to be found anywhere within Jewish thought until
the nineteenth century. Yet if, according to Farah, this is precisely how
God�s will is to be done, isn�t it a little strange that the Jews themselves
had known nothing about it?

A complete answer to Farah�s claims would require an extensive discussion
of dispensationalism, an influential trend within some (but by no means all)
sectors of Protestantism since the early nineteenth century. I refrain from
including that discussion here only because I have a lengthy article on the
subject coming out in a Catholic newspaper in the coming months. Rather
than directly critiquing the Farah/Robertson/ Falwell position here, then,
let me set forth the traditional Christian view � which, by implication, must
at least throw the recent and utterly novel F/R/F view into serious doubt.

Christians have traditionally interpreted the Old Testament in the light of
the New. In the Old Testament we are presented with the shadows that
become New Testament realities. The Old Testament is filled with what are
referred to as types of things to come under the New Covenant of Christ.
The sacrifice of animals (and foodstuffs, as with Melchisedech) was a type
of the sacrifice of Christ and the sacrifice of the Mass. The manna from
Heaven prefigures the Eucharist. St. Paul speaks of the festival days of the
Old Covenant as having been "a shadow of things to come" (Col. 2:17). The
old law, likewise, is a shadow of the new. According to O. Palmer
Robertson, a Protestant writer, "The very nature of the old covenant
provisions requires that they be viewed as prophetic shadows, not as
permanent realities."

The traditional Catholic position has essentially been that the promises
made to the Jewish people have been literally fulfilled in the person of
Christ and in the Catholic Church, and that to look for physical fulfillment
is to miss what separates the New from the Old Testament. Non-
dispensationalist Protestants, while of course not looking to the Catholic
Church as the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecy, have generally held
that the Christian community broadly conceived is what inherits the divine
promises. This is the uninterrupted Christian tradition of 1800 years.

Beginning with the New Testament and continuing through the Church
Fathers, one finds a clear continuity throughout Christian thought on the
question of Israel, the Jews, and the idea of a chosen people. According
to St. Paul�s Letter to the Galatians, the idea of the "seed of Abraham" is
to be understood in a spiritual rather than a racial or nationalistic sense,
for "they who are of faith, the same are the children of Abraham" (Gal.
3:7). "And if you be Christ�s, then are you the seed of Abraham, heirs
according to the promise" (Gal. 3:29).

The traditional and mainstream Christian view of the Old Testament, the
New Testament, and the idea of the land was recently summed up by Fr.
Majdi al-Siryani, a legal advisor to the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem. "[F]
or the extra-majority of the believers in the Bible," he wrote, "the
restoration of Israel came true in a greater spiritual reality, that is the
coming of the Messiah and the election of the Church. In this
understanding, the realities of the Old Testament are not abolished or
replaced but raised to a greater reality."

Fr. Labib Kobti, who holds a doctorate in canon law from the Lateran,
notes that Scripture does not give one group "all the land, nor even a part
of the land exclusively, or make the people who have lived there for
thousands and thousands of years�submit themselves as illegal immigrants."

This happens to be the view of the present Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem,
Michel Sabbah, who writes: "The concept of the land had then evolved
throughout different stages of Revelation, beginning with the physical,
geographical and political concept and ending up with the spiritual and
symbolic meaning. The worship of God is no longer linked to a specific
land. A specific land is not the prime and absolute value for worship. The
sole and absolute value is God and the worship of God in any place in the
world."

Many American Protestants side with Farah, Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson,
and others because they believe that is the only legitimate position for a
Bible-believing Christian. Although this suggestion is repeated endlessly, it
is ludicrously at odds with reality. The truth is very much the opposite:
any Christian prior to our age would have considered Farah�s view bizarre,
unbiblical, and absurd.

There are many reasons a Christian might lend his support and sympathy to
the Jewish state. For instance, for humanitarian reasons following World
War II, or if he sees Israel as a useful ally to the United States.

The point here is much more narrow: although a Christian may support the
state of Israel if he believes certain secular considerations weigh in its
favor, he is not obligated to believe that the creation of the state of Israel
in 1948 constituted the fulfillment of biblical prophecy. Indeed the
overwhelming bulk of Christian thought and history testify against such an
interpretation.

Yet perhaps in Farah and Pat Robertson we are blessed with greater
theological and exegetical minds than Justin Martyr, Clement of
Alexandria, Augustine, Cyril, Jerome, and John Chrysostom. Or maybe
those were all anti-Semites.

February 3, 2003

Copyright 2003 by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.

Professor Thomas E. Woods, Jr.  [send him mail] holds an AB from Harvard
and a PhD from Columbia. He teaches history, is associate editor of The
Latin Mass Magazine, and is co-author (with Christopher A. Ferrara) of The
Great Fa�ade: Vatican II and the Regime of Novelty in the Roman Catholic
Church (2002). The book (as well as a sample chapter) is available at
greatfacade.com.

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