A terrible tragedy will take place March
5-9 in the holy city of Bethlehem. Our Lord's city of birth will
host a conference called, "Christ at the Checkpoint." Which
Christ? Not the Christ of the Bible. The premise of the event is
that the Palestinians live under brutal Israeli "occupation." It
is supposedly so bad that Israel is accused of apartheid-like
treatment of the Palestinians such as the "separation"
experienced in South Africa. The symbol for all of this is the
wall of separation between Palestinian territories and Israeli
land. Their perception is that this represents a military
checkpoint. Israel's perception -- and reality -- is that the
wall saves Israeli lives.
Some 30 Christian leaders will be gathering
at the Bethlehem Bible College to raise the banner of
"Palestinian Liberation Theology" as the only true hope for
reconciliation and peace in the Middle East. The target of the
speakers will also be Israel's divine right to the land.
"Christian Zionism" will be "brought into
the conversation" during the conference--but you can bet not in
a friendly manner. No matter how benign Christian Zionism is,
the Left side of Christianity's aisle believes we look forward
to Armageddon and we blindly root for the Israelis because
they're the chief players on the end-time stage and feel Israel
has a right to their land. If the truth were known, we're a puny
band of evangelical Christians who are even outcasts in most of
the major denominations today.
Christian Zionists are roundly scolded by
this crowd. You can read that here. Our biggest problem is that
we take the Bible literally! When did that almost become a
crime? "Checkpoint" folks say we Christian Zionists support the
"occupation" but it isn't an occupation! We rejoice that on May
14, 1948, God just kept His word. Tony Campolo scolds us, too.
We're blind followers of Schofield and Darby and we need to get
over it.
"Christ at the Checkpoint" says Christian
Zionism is a political movement that is "ethnocentric,"
privileging one people at the expense of others. Christianity
calls believers in Jesus to focus on building God's kingdom on
earth, says Checkpoint publicity, and not futuristic
speculations. It is tragic how this bunch sweeps under the rug
God's continued covenant with Israel. These folks have no
appreciation of the "last days" spoken of so frequently in the
Bible. "Christ at the Checkpoint" theologians do not want to
consider Jesus as the Messiah of the Jewish people, someday
returning to earth to set up His kingdom in Jerusalem to rule as
the last Davidic King.
Then they would have to acknowledge the continuance of
the Abrahamic covenant with the modern state of Israel.
"Palestinian Liberation Theology" is
heralded, however. It is all about the Palestinian struggle for
"freedom" from their "occupied land." Followers of this
sentiment see the Israelis as an "occupier" trying to oppress
the Palestinians. Reality shows that Israel has worked them into
their society, given them seats in the Israeli parliament, and
given them a decent standard of living. Israel gave the
Palestinians so much freedom that they let them elect the terror
group Hamas to govern them. As a thank you, Hamas shells Israeli
towns and settlements regularly. This conference will tell the
world -- and the church -- that Israel brings this on due to
their repression.
Many of the participants are part of the
"religious Left" but some evangelicals show up yearly, including
Lynne Hybels, wife of Willow Creek's Pastor Bill Hybels. We
believe she should know better.
The most troubling person at such events is
Vicar Stephen Sizer who has a war against the Jews as well as
Christian Zionists. It seems he cannot -- or perhaps chooses not
-- to see the brutality of Israel's enemies. Sizer writes books
against Christians who stand with Israel but he has a distinct
aversion towards talking about Israelis being brutally
slaughtered. To him, the now-infamous wall represents repression
rather than safety.
To balance his position, Sizer needed to
speak out a year ago when a family was wiped out in Itamar,
Israel. The Fogel family has become the symbol of Palestinian
aggression, not Israeli aggression. In watching sessions of past
Checkpoint conferences, I hear little or no reference to the
root of the conflict. I hear a one-sided argument that is
decidedly anti-Israel in tone and a case consistently made for
Israel as Goliath slaying David every day.
The Checkpoint conference claims to oppose
"all forms of violence and racism." Yet a few of the Checkpoint
speakers -- including Sizer -- have given me reason to question
this. Why? In part because at least Sizer seems to be a defender
of the Gaza flotilla sent to Israel in May 2010 by Turkish
Islamists. Those on the Turkish boat headed for Gaza were lovers
of jihad. Participants on that ship sang songs calling for the
murder of Jews.
I maintain you cannot have conservative
Christians take an event like "Christ at the Checkpoint"
seriously when Stephen Sizer is on the program unless you have a
blatant Christian Zionist like me on the ticket as well. Someone
needs to challenge this guy and reveal just who is the real
racist. Sizer does not like Jews.
Critics of this event are scorned for not
considering the issues of peace, justice, and reconciliation.
The truth is, we recognize only the millennial kingdom as a time
of peace and justice. Reconciliation with the Palestinians is
not possible due to their corrupt leadership. The Arab world has
wanted the Palestinian people to be political pawns for 60 years
so they stuck them in squalid refugee camps decades ago. That is
the real reason there can be no peace. Hard line Hamas and Fatah
leadership stand in the way,
not the Israelis. This conference will not address that.
The tragic roots of Replacement Theology
can be cited as the fuel driving events like this. The church
did not replace Israel. If God could forsake the Jew, He could
also turn His back on the Christian. Replacement Theology
allowed the church to go along with Adolph Hitler 75 years ago.
God forbid the church participates -- or looks the other way --
in some future Holocaust. Frankly, Replacement Theology replaces
reality.
Even some solid evangelicals were perplexed
as to how all the promises to Israel could unfold before the
1940s. When it blossomed in 1948, students of the Bible should
have collectively stood up and cheered and not jeered as a few
denominations did. Today the "miracle of the millennium" is
living proof that God is not a liar. "Christ at the Checkpoint"
will not talk about this. Instead they will grumble about
Israel's brutal "occupation." Jesus lived and ministered in that
"occupied territory" but that won't change their perspective.
Words like "occupation" and "checkpoint"
are incendiary -- almost war-like.
I realize my response could be as well. Ever feel like
you can't take it anymore? With apologies, I acknowledge that's
where I'm at.
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Last
weekend's programming with Mike Oppenheimer looked at the
Evangelical Left's obsession with all things global-warming and
climate-change. This weekend, Jan talks to Dr. Mark Hitchcock
about his new book, "Middle East Burning: Is the Spreading
Unrest a Sign of the End Times?" Both last weekend and this
weekend we offer an extended session online.
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Awaiting His return,
Jan Markell
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