Sarah Posner
Religion Dispatches
Feb 16, 2015
 
 
 
Explaining Christian Zionism to  Israelis
 
 
To many Israelis, the world of Christian Zionism is largely hidden from  
public view. But a new report out from the Israeli progressive think tank, 
_Molad_ (http://www.molad.org/en/) , aims to change that, casting a bright  
light on the oddly symbiotic alliances between Christian Zionist activists and  
Israeli leaders. The investigative _report_ 
(http://www.molad.org/images/upload/files/Nispach.pdf) , released  Friday, 
documents these relationships, 
as well as those between Christian  Zionists and the settler movement, which 
benefits from their largesse. 
Christian Zionists, says Liat Schlesinger, Molad’s researcher for the 
report,  are routinely referred to in the Israeli press as “Christians who love 
Israel.”  But that description obscures their theology. “It doesn’t allow a 
critical look  into their theology, what is their purpose, what is their 
interest in Israel,”  she said in an interview in which she shared many of the 
report’s findings. 
The term Christian Zionist, said Schlesinger, “is very confusing” to  
Israelis. “What we’re showing in the report is they’re not Zionists if they 
wish  for the destruction of the Israeli state. Zionism is one thing and their  
religious motive is something else.” 
The narrative is familiar to Americans who follow religion, politics, and 
the  Middle East: Christian Zionists support Israel. When in Washington, they 
will  frame this support—frequently described as biblically mandated love—
in political  and policy terms, such as opposing a nuclear deal with Iran or 
negotiations with  the Palestinians. (Or, more recently, _supporting_ 
(http://religiondispatches.org/what-do-christians-think-about-the-netanyahu-speech
/)   Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s upcoming speech to a joint session 
of  Congress.) But at church, on religious television, in books, and at 
religious  conferences, this love for Israel and Jews is unabashedly presented 
as biblical  prophecy come to life, culminating in the return of Christ and 
the conversion or  elimination of Jews. 
While Christian Zionists (and Messianic Jews, and evangelicals who straddle 
 both) remain largely outside the orbit of the average Israeli, these  
activists from around the world have made themselves crucial allies to Israeli  
lawmakers. The Molad report, which is currently _available only in  Hebrew_ 
(http://www.molad.org/images/upload/files/Nispach.pdf) , aims to show 
Israelis the role Christian Zionists play in the  country’s politics, and how 
Israeli politicians dismiss violent end-times  prophecies as mild theological 
differences among friends. Schlesinger noted that  the Israeli right wing 
often accuses the left of accepting foreign money, but  there is “secret 
funding 
that comes to right-wing parties from evangelicals that  is completely 
hidden from the public.” 
Mining public documents, Schlesinger uncovered at least 69 trips Knesset  
members took around the world—including some to attractive destinations  
seemingly divorced from the turmoil of the Middle East, like the Caribbean,  
Barbados, and Rome—paid for by Christian Zionist organizations, and one, even,  
by the Messianic Jewish Alliance of America. Many of the Christian Zionist  
organizations are hardly household names, even in the U.S., highlighting 
that  many small, obscure Christian Zionist organizations together make up a  
subculture invisible to Israelis yet deeply influential to their country’s  
politics. 
While U.S. ethics requirements mandate that members of Congress disclose 
the  funders and purpose of foreign travel, including specific locations 
visited and  meetings held, Israeli law only requires disclosure of the funder 
and  destination. (Because of those requirements in the U.S., the American 
public can  discover more details about Christian Zionist-funded trips 
_American  lawmakers_ 
(http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2014/6/12/politicians-jerusalemprayer.html)
  take to Israel and the occupied territories.) 
In turn, Schlesinger said, MKs provide the flourishing Christian tourism  
business in Israel with special treatment: VIP meetings with members of the  
Knesset, officially sanctioned awards to prominent Christian Zionists, MK  
endorsements of the Christian ministries, useful for the ministries’ 
fundraising  activities, and Christian worship services featuring Israeli 
soldiers, 
and even  one in the Knesset. Israeli MKs look the other way when Christian 
Zionists  attempt to import the American culture wars, by opening crisis 
pregnancy centers  or bringing anti-gay rhetoric to Israel. 
The Israeli right wing, said Schlesinger, “is promoting the idea that  
Christian Zionists love Israel, so it’s free. We take their money and we don’t  
convert.” But the Molad report is “showing that they are trying to 
influence  Israeli society and import their agenda.” 
While the prospect of evangelicals influencing Israeli law or policy on 
LGBT  issues or _abortion_ 
(http://www.momentmag.com/opinion-why-abortion-is-a-religious-freedom-issue/)   
seems remote, their influence on settlements, 
the occupation, and opposition to  a peace deal with the Palestinians has a 
far more profound impact. (Christian  Zionists, for example, are big 
supporters of continued settlement growth and of  what they call an “undivided 
Jerusalem,” which would negate the possibility of a  Palestinian capital there 
and 
thus a two-state solution.) 
Schlesinger said the relationship between Christian Zionists and settlers 
has  also spawned a shadow tourism industry in the occupied territories.  
Evangelicals, said Schlesinger, enjoy visiting the West Bank, “they like to  
come to Ariel and ride in armored cars.” American evangelicals _harvest 
grapes_ (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TlTOxCWs_gg#t=15)  for  wine made in 
the 
West Bank, and they fund a range of services from kindergartens  and 
libraries to security equipment. 
The Molad report has already been featured in an _Israeli  television 
broadcast_ 
(http://www.mako.co.il/news-channel2/Friday-Newscast-q1_2015/Article-9de10107b248b41004.htm)
  focusing on the relationships between Christian  
Zionists and Israeli and settler leaders. In that report, Oded Revivi, mayor of 
 the West Bank settlement of Efrat, is shown saying he has met Christian 
Zionists  that make him feel like to the left by comparison. 
The reporter asks Revivi if rabbis would say not to take money from 
Christian  Zionists. Most, says Revivi, advise taking it. Money, he says, has  
power.

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