Re: The following story in The Federalist
 
 
Mollie Hemingway is about as smart of a religion reporter as it is possible 
 to get.
I try to follow her reports as much as possible. Here is one that has  
immediate
importance in the context of current US politics. 
 
I have read another story on the same subject, about the "boos" that Ted  
Cruz 
received from the crowd of Mid East Christians when he praised  Israel.
 
Clearly there is a disconnect somewhere. As Mollie H. says  in her article, 
the 
situation in the Mid East is messy. And that is how it always is, in the  
current
Mid East as it was in the history of the Mid East. Its always like the  game
of Risk, it is rare when a war features Good vs Bad actors, usually  there
are 4 or 5 actors who all hate each other. And each actor is some  unique
mix of good and evil, or good but out-of-touch-with-reality.
 
Or think of the kinds of things kids do in grade school, like collect
a few ants from several ant-hills and put them in a jar and see what  
happens.
viz, they all kill each other without mercy.
 
Clearly, at any rate, the US needs to reach some kid of  "understanding"
with  Israel about Christian policy in the Mid East. Just as clearly  BHO
has little or no interest in any such thing because he is, at heart,  
anti-Israel.
Which won't be all that easy for the state of Israel due to the  presence
of the Haredim, who are throwbacks to medieval history and who often  are
overtly hostile to Christians. So far, the state has not had to formulate  
such
a policy but there is a growing need for exactly this that has now  become
urgent. So, there is this to consider.
 
However, people like Cruz also need to at least do sufficient study  to
understand just how complicated the situation in the region really  is.
You cannot reduce anything about the Mid East to the outlines of
a morality play, or some one social principle, or to a few  well-chosen
platitudes or rules of thumb. 
 
You've got to love complexity to understand the Mid East
Now as well as long before now, for the world of the Bible
was just as messy and multi-faceted.
 
 
Billy
 
===================================
 
 
 
 
The Federalist
 
Ted Cruz Is No Hero For Insulting A Room Of Persecuted  Christians

September 11, 2014 By  _Mollie  Hemingway_ 
(http://thefederalist.com/author/mzhemingway/) 
 
Yesterday morning, Ted Cruz sat down for some breakfast with Alana Goodman  
and other staff of the Washington Free Beacon:

 
A few hours later, Goodman had posted a story headlined: 
_Cruz  Headlines Conference Featuring Hezbollah Supporters_ 
(http://freebeacon.com/national-security/cruz-headlines-conference-featuring-hezbollah-suppo
rters/) 

The  Beacon’s motto for its “combat journalism” is “_Do unto them_ 
(http://freebeacon.com/columns/combat-journalism/) ,” which  typically makes 
them 
a fun read. And boy did they “do unto them” in this piece.  It turns out 
that the topic of the conference wasn’t Hezbollah support but,  rather, 
persecution of Christians in the Middle East. Here’s how it was _described  
elsewhere_ 
(http://myocn.net/washington-summit-call-attention-plight-middle-east-christians/)
 : 
Washington– The deteriorating situation facing millions of Christians and 
other religious minorities in the Middle East will be the focus of a 
bipartisan and ecumenical conference in the nation’s capital next month. The 
three-day event sponsored by In Defense of Christians (IDC) will feature 
speakers 
from all over the globe.

Washington– The deteriorating situation facing millions of Christians and 
other religious minorities in the Middle East will be the focus of a 
bipartisan and ecumenical conference in the nation’s capital next month. The 
three-day event sponsored by In De

You wouldn’t know it from much of the media, but the global plight of  
Christians is worsening as followers of Jesus are suffering and dying at the  
hands of oppressive regimes. The past century has seen the eradication of  
Christians in former strongholds in the Middle East. And this is something that 
 people have been working very hard to fight. Many hoped this conference 
would  draw much-needed attention to their suffering. 
Goodman’s piece, in vintage WFB style, is filled with alarmist language. We 
 learn of a Maronite Christian seeking a liaison with Hezbollah and it 
sounds  horrifically bad until you realize the purpose is to work together to 
fight  ISIS, for instance. Her descriptive language for the various Christian 
leaders  (e.g. “Antioch Church patriarch”) suggests a lack of intimacy with 
the  topic. 
The real problem, of course, is just the messiness of the situation in the  
Middle East vis-a-vis foreign policy interests and religious persecution. 
Is  Syrian President Bashar al-Assad the enemy or a friend? The United States 
 considers him an enemy. The Free Beacon really considers him an enemy. But 
 Christians in the region view him differently because his regime is 
fighting the  guys who are killing them and seeking their eradication. 
So Goodman writes: 
However, critics fear several of the speakers will try to use the event to 
bolster Washington’s support for the Syrian regime in its ongoing civil war 
and help Bashar al-Assad restore his legitimacy and power.

However, critics fear several of the speakers will try to use the event to 
bolster Washington’s support for the Syrian regime in its ongoing civil war 
and help Bashar al-Assad rest

Well, yeah. It’s messy.  
Anyway, hopefully we can all recognize the importance of dealing with this  
huge problem of Christians being killed and oppressed even if our politics  
aren’t all the same, right? Perhaps especially if our politics aren’t  
aligned? 
Maybe not. When Cruz was supposed to give the keynote address and discuss 
the  deadly serious topic of persecution of Christians, he instead insulted a 
largely  immigrant and foreign crowd as a group that didn’t understand 
their own  political situation and stomped out of the room after calling them a 
bunch of  haters. You can _get  the details and transcript here_ 
(http://www.theamericanconservative.com/coppage/ted-cruz-crashes-defense-of-christians-s
ummit/) . 
Sheesh. Or as Michael Brendan Dougherty put it about the general  brouhaha: 
The fact is, as Mark Tooley explains in _a  very thoughtful and balanced 
piece_ 
(http://juicyecumenism.com/2014/09/11/senator-cruz-mideast-christians-israel/) 
, that Christians who are persecuted have  political views that may 
not align with U.S. interests. Who knew? For many of  us, our concern about 
genocide of Christians isn’t limited to those who are  perfectly aligned 
with our views. Someone will have to explain to me how  positioning Cruz and 
the Free Beacon this way — as the go-to group for missing  the point on 
Christian persecution — is a good thing for either of them or the  military 
solutions they seek. 
Clearly Michael Goldfarb, who founded the Free Beacon, thinks it was a home 
 run all around: 
The “keynote,” if you can call it that, turns out not to have gone over 
quite  as well with the persecuted groups or their allies, if you can imagine. 
Seraphim  Danckaert explains over at _Orthodox  Christian Network_ 
(http://myocn.net/sen-ted-cruz-booed-off-stage-middle-eastern-christians/) : 
[I]t appears Cruz has no meaningful exposure to the actual experience of  
Middle Eastern Christians, nor does it seem he is even aware that there are  
millions of Middle Eastern Christians (and Jews, for that matter) who are  
strongly opposed to the official political and military policies of the 
modern  state of Israel.

The phrase that ignited the disagreement is  particularly telling: “
Christians have no greater ally than  Israel.”

What kind of worldview or theological bias would allow for  such a 
statement? Only one that presumes there is a definite conformity  between the 
needs 
and desires of Christians everywhere and the Middle East  policy of the 
United States of America. It seems to me, in other words, that  when Ted Cruz 
says “Christians have no greater ally than Israel,” he really  means that “
America has no greater ally than Israel” — and that the subjects  of those 
two sentences are identical in his mind.
One can certainly argue in support of Cruz’s statement — politically, at  
least — and yet also recognize how fraught the topic is for Christians in 
the  region. 
While the case absolutely can and should be made that support for Israel 
does  help the fight against Christian persecution, it would be naive and 
wrong for  Christians to think that the United States has their interests at 
heart globally  (or domestically, it seems!). And the United States has no 
governmental  obligation to help out the Christians who are dying in the Middle 
East, although  it would be wonderful if we could stop doing things that 
lead so quickly to  their persecution. But I do wonder if some hawks 
misunderstand or underestimate  American Christian sentiment about our brothers 
and 
sisters in Christ at their  peril.

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