On God’s side
“. . .You might even be found opposing God!” (Acts 5:38-39).
This is a scary thought, isn’t it—to pour all your guts into a cause and then find out that you were on the wrong side. This is the specter Gamaliel raises before the Jerusalem Council, who are hell-bent on snuffing out the mad ramblings of 12 men turning the world upside-down about some person named Jesus supposedly raised from the dead.
Paul knew the feeling. He was raised to be a Pharisee of Pharisees—till knocked off his feet on the Damascus road with the revelation that his Moby Dick was the way and the truth and the life.
And so, with President Obama cozying up to Muslim nations and seeming to snub Israel, I am feeling confused all over again about what my posture should be toward Israel.
“Evangelical Christians support Israel because we believe that the words of Moses and the ancient prophets of Israel were inspired by God. We believe that the emergence of a Jewish state in the land promised by God to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob was ordained by God. We believe that God has a plan for this nation which he intends to be a blessing to all the nations of the earth”
That’s one side of the argument. But what keep giving me indigestion are the Bible verses typically adduced for this position: “I will take you from the nations and gather you from all the countries and bring you into your own land. I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you shall be clean from all your uncleanness, and from all your idols I will cleans you. And I will give you a new heart . . . and cause you to walk in my statutes . . .” (Ezekiel 36:24-27).
To be sure, God isn’t through with Israel (Romans 11). But for the moment the Ezekiel 36 shoe fits only halfway: The Jews have returned to the land, but Benjamin Netanyahu’s Israel is no more walking in his statutes than Sweden. So what do you do? Do you ignore Part B and hope that “if you build it their hearts will come”? Do you “help” God out that way? Or is that approach uncomfortably reminiscent of Abraham helping out the prophecy by sleeping with Hagar?
Who is Israel, anyway? Part of our problem is the Bible’s ambiguity about the word “Israel.” Sometimes God talks as if the true Israel is not folks of the bloodline of Abraham but of the faith of Abraham (Galatians 3:7). But then just when I have decided to dismiss the geo-political entity called Israel, God talks longingly about her future restoration (Romans 11, Psalm 80).
We Christians have a responsibility to Israel, but what is it? To be cheerleaders for her current Messiah-rejecting government, or to preach to her the gospel? If you tell me it’s both, then how do you pull that off? How do you bankroll her without giving her (and the world) the impression that you are behind her without qualification? Or without tipping her off that she is completely lost unless she repents?
If you then tell me that evangelicals support Israel because she is, as Pat Robertson said, “an island of democracy . . . in the midst of a sea of dictatorial regimes . . . and a fanatical religion intent on returning to the feudalism of 8th century Arabia,” that’s fine as long as you’re aware that you just switched horses. Democracy is an entirely separate reason for supporting her.
And if it’s a true reason, then presumably you will be prepared to revoke your support if she is ever found to be not so democratic. “The political support for the nation of Israel is a distinct issue,” said Vern Poythress, “and should be qualified by the standard of the justice of God.” That is, you apply the same yardstick to Israel’s behavior as to any other nation’s: Does she honor her treaties? Does she treat her citizens with equity? Is she engaged in genocide? Etcetera.
“I will bless those who bless you, and him who dishonors you I will curse, and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed” (Genesis 12:3).
If that promise and threat still apply, I sure want to be found on the right side of history when the end comes.
To hear commentaries by Andrée Seu, click here.














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back to top8 Comments to “On God’s side”
I doubt it.
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I am most inclined to think, especially in light of how Jesus is very intentionally the antithesis of the Messiah as deliverer of Israel the nation-state, that your second-to-last paragraph there is most appropriate. I think that promise in Genesis 12:3 is just as applicable to you & me today as it was to Abraham’s great-great-grandchildren in Egypt in light of verses like Galatians 3:7, where we are very much a part of Abraham’s family of faith.
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I was not raised on Pat Robertson’s view of the State of Israel, though I understand why people believe it.
I doubt that God sitting in heaven looks down and sees the arbitrary lines we’ve drawn as borders. Politics is man’s invention, not God’s. Islam distorts Christianity. If you are a believing Christian, you can see how Christ fits in with the Old Testament, and you can also see that Islam is against Christ because of who they say he is not.
The issue of whether or not the Jews will accept Christ as Messiah is no different for them than it is for non-Jews. They didn’t 2,000 years ago, I’ve only met a few who do today, but the Bible tells us that Christ will return to defend them — and it will be put up or shut up time on the yes or no question when that happens, but I’m thinking the way He returns will pretty much do the trick and we’ll hear “oh, now I get it” a lot on that day.
So, do we pray for the peace of Jerusalem? I think we do. I think we pray for everyone there, but I don’t think we turn a blind eye to what’s really going on and abandon the Jews to destruction. Christ doesn’t return because Arabs want to kill Jews. He returns to claim his own and send the devil packing. There’s no politics involved. So, as I see it, we are not on the Israeli side or the Arab side so much as we must choose between Christ and the devil. Choice seems clear to me.
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While I understand and even sometimes ponder the same ambiguities that Andree raises, at the end of the day I note that Israel was miraculously (there’s no other word) restored after 1900 years in 1948, and was miraculously preserved in 1968 and 1973. From this I conclude that God is at work in physical Israel and who am I to judge His timing and standards?
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Thank you for saying it out loud. These have been anathama words in some circles. The quandry is just the position in which to be. We just can’t see as clearly as God sees.
The same question is appropriate for America. (Even though the Bible is silent on “The United States.” Some Christians support the USA just as rigidly as some support Israel.
A nation is never our HOPE. Only One Person fills that role.
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So right, Fisherman. Right now we, as a nation, support Israel because they are one of our allies. That does not mean we agree and support everything they do, anymore than they would us. However, they were given a right to exist. Why should any nation have the right now, to take that away? Who wants to do so, and why? Is that really necessary? Is that right? Those are all considerations for the politicians to make.
God will do what he wants to do with Israel. In the meantime I can only look in wonder at the reformation of this little country and at its big place in the world’s political scene, inspite of its small size or seeming unimportance.
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Prophetic biblical reasons aside, our Christian faith demands the support and defense of anyone who would be wantonly murdered by his “neighbor.” Muslim intentions toward Israel and its Jewish people have been malevolently stated and demonstrated time and again for the last 50 plus years. With nothing to restrain them, they would murder every last man, woman, and child they could get their hands on.
If we have we not yet learned the lessons of Auschwitz and Buchenwald, we are dullards of the first order. Why should we support Israel? The question is stupid beyond measure.
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The sons of Israel (the 12 tribes) will be a mighty force used by GOD during the Tribulation – one has only to look at the 144,000 stated in Revelation 7 and 14.
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