Showing posts with label Six Day War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Six Day War. Show all posts

Saturday, September 23, 2017

THE GOLDEN AGE OF JEWISH-CHRISTIAN RELATIONS - TULY WEISZ Jerusalem Post

THE GOLDEN AGE OF JEWISH-CHRISTIAN RELATIONS

    BYTULY WEISZ
     
     SEPTEMBER 22, 2017 13:36
     

    Christian love demanded that they try and convert the Jews, but more often than not, Jews felt more wrath than grace.

    Powerful docudrama produced by CBN.

    Powerful docudrama produced by CBN.. (photo credit:CBN)
    Earlier this summer, hundreds of Israelis packed the Jerusalem Cinematheque theater for the 
    premiere of the Six Day War documentary, “In Our Hands.” The film traces the steps of the 
    55th Paratroopers Brigade through firsthand interviews with IDF soldiers and historical battle 
    reenactments. Following the screening, an emotional curtain call featured four of the now 
    elderly paratroopers who appeared in the film. They shuffled onto the stage to receive 
    bouquets of flowers and a standing ovation.

    There was nothing unusual that evening to distinguish this event from any of the other 
    Six Day War commemoration events that took place in Israel or abroad, except for the 
    evening’s host – Gordon Robertson, CEO of the Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN).

    Robertson, who also served as the film’s executive director, explained to the Jerusalem 
    audience his motivation as a Christian to make a film about Israel. “One of the guiding 
    verses for me in this whole project was Psalm 126: ‘Then they said among the nations, 
    the Lord has done great things for them.’ And I say to you, ‘The Lord has done great 
    things for you.’”

    While the movie was produced by CBN, which was founded by Gordon’s father and 
    televangelist Pat Robertson in 1961, it contained no overtly, or even covertly, 
    Christian messages.

    “This is a film made by Christians, but it is not a Christian film,” Erin Zimmerman, 
    the film’s director, explained. “The Six Day War is not a Christian story; it is first and 
    foremost a Jewish and Israeli story and I wanted to honor that.”

    This desire to honor Israel without strings attached and devoid of proselytizing is one 
    of the newest, and most welcome, trends in Christian Zionism. The relationship between 
    Christians and Jews is long and complex, and a fascinating case study in how shifting 
    theology correlates to changes in behavior.

    A short overview of some major shifts in Christian beliefs toward Israel can explain this 
    new era of Christian Zionism marked by greater sensitivity and respect toward the 
    Jewish People.

    Christianity emerged as an offshoot of Judaism 2,000 years ago, putting the two religions 
    immediately at odds. Early Church Fathers added pagan elements to recruit more local 
    adherents, thus widening the gap ‒ and animosity ‒ with the Jews.

    When it came to relating to Judaism, Christianity developed what has become known as 
    “replacement theology.” The idea is that, as a punishment for rejecting Jesus, God replaced 
    Israel with the Church and the original Bible (Old Testament) with a new one. It didn’t take 
    long for Jews to go from being viewed as replaced to rejected, despised and, ultimately, hated.

    Christian love demanded that they try and convert the Jews, but more often than not, Jews 
    felt more wrath than grace. One could draw a direct line from replacement theology to the 
    blood libels, forced conversions, inquisitions and expulsions that shaped the Middle Ages.

    During the modern period, Christianity underwent an internal revolution known as the 
    Protestant Reformation, which paved the way for a new approach for relating to Jews. 
    In the 16th century, Martin Luther battled against the Catholic Church and advocated for 
    individuals to read the Bible, made widely available for the first time through the newly
    invented printing press, for themselves. No longer was biblical interpretation in the hands 
    of the ruling elite. Rather, everyone was encouraged to read and understand God’s word for 
    themselves, which they did in large numbers.

    It doesn’t take much of a bible scholar to recognize that one theme appears on almost every 
    page and in nearly every chapter of this holy text ‒ that is the relationship between the land 
    and the people of Israel. With an open mind and in the absence of previously held interpretations, 
    a literal reading of the text started to lead some Christians to begin viewing Jews differently.

    For centuries, the people of Israel had been relegated to sub-human status and the land of 
    Israel reduced to a metaphor. However, the age of enlightenment allowed Christians to see 
    the Jews as real people and, in the era of exploration, they discovered that Israel was an 
    actual place. More and more Christians started reading the bible literally and saw the 
    prophecies of the return to Zion as being something within worldly reach.

    The Puritans were among the first Reformed Protestants who began praying for a Jewish 
    return to their homeland and were responsible for introducing the idea of Jewish restoration
     to America. While popular in England, as well, Restorationism (also described as Christian 
    Primitivism) struck a noticeable chord in the New World. US presidents studied Hebrew, 
    and American scholars traveled to Palestine to map out the area and dig up archeological relics.

    At the time, Restorationism was steeped in replacement theology, which, even in its benign 
    form, calls for proselytizing the Jews. The motivating force behind Christian efforts to restore 
    the people to the land was best summarized by the influential pastor Charles Spurgeon who 
    preached in 1864: “We look forward, then, for these two things. I am not going to theorize 
    upon which of them will come first ‒ whether they shall be restored first, and converted 
    afterwards ‒ or converted first and then restored. They are to be restored and they are to 
    be converted, too.”

    Restorationists were among Theodor Herzl’s most ardent supporters. The Reverend William 
    Hechler, an Anglican clergyman, dedicated his life to assisting Herzl upon reading
     “The Jewish State,” which was published 12 years after his own treatise, “The Restoration of 
    the Jews to Palestine.” Hechler immediately began to introduce Herzl to Europe’s leading 
    political rulers, including 
    German Kaiser Wilhelm, Queen Victoria of England and the Sultan of Turkey. Appreciatively, 
    Herzl invited Hechler, in 1897, to the first World Zionist Congress in Basel as a non-voting 
    delegate and the “first Christian Zionist.”

    Major shifts in Christian theology vis-à- vis Israel continued into the 20th century because 
    of the Holocaust and the establishment of the State of Israel. Many Christians recognized 
    the Holocaust as the bitter culmination of centuries of Christian antisemitism, which led to 
    soul searching throughout the Church. Christian thinkers recognized the perils inherent 
    in replacement theology as playing an active role in the Holocaust and began to question 
    this theology seriously for the first time.

    The establishment of the State of Israel, and its hard-to-explain successes, chipped away 
    at replacement theology from the opposite direction. Christians began asking themselves: 
    If God had rejected Israel, then how come the Jews are so successful making the deserts 
    bloom and defending themselves from their enemies? The perception that many biblical 
    promises were being fulfilled seemed like clear and convincing evidence that God had not 
    broken His covenant with Israel, after all.

    In recent decades, Christian Zionist leaders and organizations have emerged all over the 
    world. In addition to their political and philanthropic support of Israel, Christian leaders 
    are, more significantly, for the first time publicly rejecting replacement theology.

    Perhaps the best-known group, the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem, has a 
    lengthy essay on their website explaining why they renounce replacement theology. 
    Similarly, Pastor John Hagee has used his influential ministry, Christians United for Israel, 
    to unreservedly, “expose the lies of replacement theology.”

    To be sure, these Christian Zionist voices are still a minority within the Church.

    Nevertheless, we have entered a new age of Jewish-Christian relations.

    Chris Mitchell, CBN’s Middle East bureau chief, said “In Our Hands” doesn’t ever 
    mention Jesus, quote from the New Testament or push a Christian agenda. In that way, 
    “I feel that the movie is a gift to the Jewish people honoring the soldiers who fought in the 
    Six Day War and the Jews who waited over two millennia to return to Jerusalem.”

    I asked Mitchell if CBN would have been as sensitive had the movie been released upon 
    the 25th anniversary of the 1967 war in the early 1980s. He said, “There has definitely 
    been a remarkable development of deeper relationships between Jews and Christians 
    in recent years. A greater understanding of the Jewish community and getting to know 
    each other better has led to more sensitivity.”

    Christian theology has shifted since its inception and has never been as respectful toward 
    the Jewish people than it is now. The growth of Christian Zionism is a direct outcome of 
    this change, so it is no wonder that Israel is enjoying unparalleled support from large 
    segments of Christianity. After 2,000 years, Christian-Jewish relations are entering a new, 
    golden era of restoration without replacement.

    Tuly Weisz is an Orthodox rabbi and founder and director of Israel 365, the publisher of 
    ‘Breaking Israel News’ and the editor of The Israel Bible.

    Wednesday, June 7, 2017

    Congress Reaffirms: Jerusalem Belongs to Israel - Israel Today

    Congress Reaffirms: Jerusalem Belongs to Israel

    Tuesday, June 06, 2017 |  Israel Today Staff
    The US Senate on Monday voted 90-0 in favor of a resolution reaffirming that a united Jerusalem is and will forever remain Israel's capital city.
    The vote was held to mark the 50th anniversary of Jerusalem's reunification under Israeli rule during the Six Day War in 1967.
    The resolution called upon President Donald Trump to abide by a 1995 law stipulating that the US Embassy be relocated from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
    Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama all sidestepped the law by citing national security. There remains hope in Israel that Trump will buck that trend.
    In related news, US Ambassador Nikki Haley on Tuesday again chastised the United Nations Human Rights Council for its obsession with criticizing Israel, even as genuine human rights crises elsewhere go unmentioned.
    "It is essential that this council address its chronic anti-Israel bias if it wants to maintain its credibility," Haley insisted.
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    In the beginning GOD created the world ... - Israel Today

    In the beginning GOD created the world ...

    Wednesday, June 07, 2017 |  Israel Today Staff
    There was darkness and gloom the hearts of the nation of Israel just before the Six Day War, but God was present here as well. After only six days, Israel defeated her invaders and reunited Jerusalem. The Holy City regained her stature.
    Creation was completed in 6 days during which God shone His light on mankind. We should be grateful and know that even in the darkest times our Creator will shine His light into the darkness!
    Help us put a smile on the faces of our soldiers! Despite worldwide anti-Semitic slogans and actions against Israel and her defence forces, you can give the guardians of Israel a small glimmer of light!
    Sponsor a solidarity package and let our soldiers feel that you are standing behind them both in prayer and deeds!
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    Tuesday, May 16, 2017

    Joel C. Rosenberg's Blog - How close did Russia come to intervening in the Six Day War against Israel?

    CBN-Joel-SixDayWar

    New post on Joel C. Rosenberg's Blog

    How close did Russia come to intervening in the Six Day War against Israel? My interview with CBN News.

    by joelcrosenberg
    This month, Israelis are celebrating -- and Palestinians are mourning -- the 50th anniversary of the Six Day War, which set into motion the reunification of Jerusalem, as well as Judea and Samaria (i.e., the "West Bank" of the Jordan River), under Jewish control for the first time in more than 2,000 years.
    The Christian Broadcasting Network asked me to discuss these historic and controversial events with two specific questions in mind:
    1. How close did the Soviet Union come to actively intervening militarily in the Six Day War on the side of Egypt, Jordan and Syria and against the State of Israel?
    2. How significant was the war and its aftermath in terms of Biblical prophecy?
    Here's the text of the story that Chris Mitchell, CBN's Middle East Bureau Chief, filed. [ To watch the 5 minute video of his report, please click here.]
    By Chris Mitchell, CBN News bureau chief
    JERUSALEM, Israel – The 1967 Six-Day War pitted a relatively young Israel against five established Arab armies. One of the world's superpowers also came dangerously close to entering the war, which led to fears of a potential Armageddon.
    June 5, 1967. Prime Minister Levi Eshkol sent a cable to President Lyndon Johnson informing him the war had begun.
    "Israel's existence and integrity have been endangered," he wrote, adding a request: "Prevent the Soviet Union from exploiting and enlarging the conflict … [at Israel's] greatest hour of danger."
    "What most people don't realize is that the actor that was perhaps the most dangerous, but operating sort of behind the scenes, was the Soviet Union," Middle East expert Joel Rosenberg told CBN News.
    While Israel faced the combined might of Arab countries, it was the Soviet Union casting a giant shadow over the war.
    "Now June 5, 1967, the morning Eshkol orders Israeli bombers into action and they're successful, Soviet Premier Kosygin dials the hotline right into the White House and demands to talk to President Johnson," Rosenberg continued. "Now the hotline was rarely used except in the most extreme crisis. And the message that Kosygin sent heavily implied that if the United States didn't force Israel back down, that the Soviets were going to take direct military action. And this took the conflict to an entirely different level."
    President Johnson had told Eshkol the U.S. might cut off political and military assistance to Israel in case of a preemptive strike.
    "So the Israeli leadership was already taking a huge risk that Johnson would keep his word. Once the Soviets got involved, a dynamic changed. Suddenly the Johnson White House saw the conflict not simply in terms of Israeli Egyptian-Syrian terms but in U.S.-Soviet terms," Rosenberg explained.
    That led Johnson to send the Sixth Fleet steaming toward Israel as a show of support.
    Rosenberg believes the fact that the Soviets never got involved was part of the Six-Day War miracle.
    "I think it's one of the untold stories – or rarely told stories – of God's protection of Israel is the fact that the Soviets seemed to come so close that they were threatening at the to the Americans, to the Israelis directly,"  he said. "They were promising their Arab allies that they would do more, and they were actually moving military forces closer and closer to Israel."
    Rosenberg also sees the war as a prophetic milestone.
    "The Bible does say that Jerusalem will come back under Jewish control and it happened in June 1967. The Bible does say that Judea and Samaria – what the world calls the West Bank – will be in Jewish hands," he said. "It's part of the biblical heartland and God says He will restore the land and restore people to the land. And I think you also see God giving this land back to the Jewish people – not because we deserve it but because God had promised it."   The Six-Day War became a turning point for Jewish immigration to the land of Israel.
    "Throughout the Old Testament, God says that He is going to draw the Jewish people back to the land. But what is interesting is at that moment when Mordecai Gur, the Israeli general, said on the radio, 'The Temple Mount is in our hands.' When that was broadcast, not just through Israel but worldwide, it electrified Jewish communities all over the planet."
    "The level of aliyah – Jews leaving their exile countries and coming back to the land of their forefathers – skyrocketed in the years ahead," Rosenberg said.
    "In fact famously we know that Natan Sharansky, the hero of the Soviet Refusniks – you know Jews were refused being allowed to leave for such a long time – Natan Sharansky, who is now the head of the Jewish Agency in charge of helping Jews come back to Israel, said that when – he didn't even identify himself as a Jew in 1967 – but when he heard that radio broadcast that Mordecai Gur had said, 'The Temple Mount is in our hands,' something lit up in him. It's like a frequency had turned on inside of him. 'I'm Jewish. This is important. I need to think about helping my Jewish brothers and sisters get back to the land of our forefathers.'"
    Although Israel survived one of its darkest moments, Rosenberg says it still faces threats from the north, backed by a familiar interloper.
    "I see that the Russians are very actively moving into this region," he continued. "They have made Iran their primary ally. They are selling the most advanced weaponry, including the most advanced anti-aircraft missiles. They're selling nuclear technology to Iran, the worst terror state in the region. And now they are working hand in glove with Iran to prop up [President] Bashar al-Assad, who has slaughtered some 500,000 people in Syria. So you now have Russian forces, Iranian forces helping Syrian forces just a few miles north of Israel."
    Fifty years since the battle for Jerusalem took place, Rosenberg says Israel and its capital remain on the front lines.
    "Jerusalem was reunited 50 years ago, but the battle for Jerusalem remains. It's a political battle. It's an economic battle, with people trying to isolate Israel politically around the world," he said. "People are trying to boycott, divest and sanction Israel in part because Israel has Jerusalem.
    "Jerusalem is the flash point. Jerusalem is the epicenter. You know for 4,000 years people have wanted this city and they have fought hard to get it. And so, the fact that Israel controls it today is biblical, it's prophetic, but it's also complicated and we need to be praying for the peace of Jerusalem and praying for Israel to be secure," he concluded.
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    joelcrosenberg | May 16, 2017 at 10:44 am | Categories: Epicenter | URL: http://wp.me/piWZ7-7Iu