Most Jews in the world have some clue as to why evangelicals are supporting Israel. How many Jews in America understand evangelicals are going after the Jewish vote? Indeed, it is clear the outrageous moves made by End Time maniacs constitutes the first time the Tribulation Lovers severely affected foreign policy and the way Jews vote in America and Israel. The first thing Jewish voters have to consider, if they help put Republicans in office they are going to further erode gains made by the Civil Rights Movement, and take away the social safety net that helps the poor. One can expect civil unrest, but, this is just what the Chaos Christians want. They believe that only after their lawmakers put an end to secular rule in Israel and the United States then Jesus Son of God will come again and establish a heavenly throne on earth. Netanyahu knows about this CRAZY plan, and gets a good chuckle as he plays political games with it in order to get his way. Not in our history have elected members of the Congress and the Senate empowered a foreign leader over the President of the United States in order to do away with this Democracy, and create a godly kingdom after much bloodshed.
Jews are employing Terrorism, and they know it. It’s time the whole world knows it. When this evil and destructive plan fails, then you better believe the Sane People will take retribution, and purge this Democracy of insane treacherous religious addicts and their allies.
Jon Presco
http://www.religion-online.org/showarticle.asp?title=216
Within weeks, full-page advertisements appeared in major U.S. newspapers stating, “The time has come for evangelical Christians to affirm their belief in biblical prophecy and Israel’s divine right to the land.” Targeting Soviet involvement in the UN conference, the ad went on to say: “We affirm as evangelicals our belief in the promised land to the Jewish people . . . . We would view with grave concern any effort to carve out of the Jewish homeland another nation or political entity.”The ad was financed and coordinated by Jerusalem’s Institute for Holy Land Studies, an evangelical organization with a Christian Zionist orientation. Several leading dispensationalists signed the ad, including Kenneth Kantzer of Christianity Today and Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, singer Pat Boone, and dispensationalist theologian and Dallas Theological Seminary president John Walvoord.The advertising campaign was one of the first public signs of a Likud-evangelical alliance. A former employee of the American Jewish Committee, Jerry Strober, who had coordinated the campaign, made the political connection in a statement to Newsweek: “[The evangelicals] are Carter’s constituency and he [had] better listen to them… The real source of strength the Jews have in this country is from the evangelicals.” |
http://www.vox.com/2015/3/20/8263583/us-israel-crisis
http://www.jpost.com/Diplomatic-Conference/Gathering-Evangelical-support-for-Israel-383990
| When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited Washington this past January, his initial meeting was not with President Clinton but with Jerry Falwell and more than 1,000 fundamentalist Christians. The crowd saluted the prime minister as “the Ronald Reagan of Israel,” and Falwell pledged to contact more than 200,000 evangelical pastors, asking them to “tell President Clinton to refrain from putting pressure on Israel” to comply with the Oslo accords.
The meeting between Netanyahu and Falwell illustrates a remarkable political and theological convergence. The link between Israelis Likud government and the U.S. Religious Right was established by Natanyahu’s mentor, Menachem Begin, during the Carter and Reagan administrations. However, the roots of evangelical support for Israel lie in the long tradition of Christian thinking about the millennium. |
Republican House Speaker John Boehner announced Friday that he’ll be visiting Israel later in the month. Though his office said the trip was long in the works, it will take place less than a month after Boehner hosted Netanyahu for a controversial address to Congress in which the prime minister ripped into Obama’s Iran diplomacy.
He added, “I think 2016 does present an opportunity for Republicans to massively improve their performance with Jewish voters.”
Mackowiak noted the issue appeals to two core constituencies of the GOP base.
“Evangelical Christians in the United States strongly support Israel, and they do it from a biblical position,” he said. “National security hawks strongly support Israel, too.”
Though Jewish Americans have traditionally voted Democratic, there’s evidence that could be shifting. American Jews’ support for the Republican Party has been growing as the population becomes more Orthodox and as some have become more critical of Obama’s policies in the Middle East
Mindful of the damage his win-at-all-costs moves had wrought, Netanyahu lost no time trying to unsay what he had said. In his victory speech, he promised to be prime minister of all Israelis, Jewish and non-Jewish alike. And in a US TV interview on Thursday, he insisted that he does want a “sustainable, peaceful two-state solution” after all, so long as “circumstances” change.
I know of at least one European leader who now says privately that Netanyahu’s credibility is shot
“He hit a grand slam with his strong, honest and forthright speech to the U.S. Congress and the American people,” said international Christian broadcaster and journalist, Earl Cox. “The Israeli people should be proud of their prime minister for being a man of courage and conviction who was willing to stand in the face of seemingly overwhelming opposition in order to defend and protect Israel and warn the free world about the very real dangers of a nuclear Iran – something other world leaders are unwilling or afraid to do.”
Yes, Boehner’s invitation to Netanyahu, rendered independently of the White House, was a way to get under President Obama’s skin and in President Obama’s way. And, yes, that provocation was manna to the most conservative House Republicans, who sometimes chafe under Boehner’s leadership.
But they loved what Boehner did for an additional reason: It catered to the evangelical Christians who are an integral part of the party’s base, especially for lawmakers from the reddest states or districts. In fact, as Ashley Parker reported in The Times, Boehner’s caucus gave him a standing ovation last week even though he was bucking them by linking arms with Nancy Pelosi to pass a bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security.
Christian Zionism as a sentiment is not new,” said Dan Senor, a Republican foreign policy adviser who has traveled to Israel with Mitt Romney, Chris Christie and other Republican candidates. “But as a movement, it has grown exponentially in size and political sophistication over the past 15 years.”
In early 2013, when Obama nominated Chuck Hagel, a Republican, to become the next defense secretary, and Hagel’s support for Israel was called into question, one of the groups lobbying against him in greatest number and at greatest volume was Christians United for Israel.
Its founder and chairman, John Hagee, was in Washington, D.C., with his wife last week at Netanyahu’s speech. They were Adelson’s guests.


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