ARAB CHURCH LEADERS REJECT CHRISTIAN ZIONISM AS 'FALSE TEACHING'
By David Dolan
CNSNews.com, VA
Sept 6 2006
Jerusalem (CNSNews.com) - Following the recent Israeli-Hizballah war
in Lebanon, four Arab church leaders based in Jerusalem have issued a
scathing attack on Christians who actively support the Jewish state,
indirectly including President George W. Bush.
In a statement published just one week after a United Nations ceasefire
went into effect on August 14, Nazareth-born Roman Catholic Patriarch
Michel Sabbah was joined by two Arab Protestant bishops and one Arab
Orthodox archbishop, in charging that "the Christian Zionist program
provides a worldview where the Gospel is identified with the ideology
of empire, colonialism and militarism."
"We categorically reject Christian Zionist doctrines as false
teaching that corrupts the biblical message of love, justice and
reconciliation," the statement said.
Signed by Syrian Orthodox Archbishop Swerios Malki Mourad, along with
Sabah and the Episcopal and Evangelical Lutheran bishops of Jerusalem,
the joint statement indirectly denounced President Bush for declaring
his support last May for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's plan
to hold onto some Jewish settlements in the disputed West Bank after
unilaterally withdrawing from many others.
"We further reject the contemporary alliance of Christian Zionist
leaders and organizations with elements in the governments of Israel
and the United States that are presently imposing their unilateral
pre-emptive borders and domination over Palestine."
The clerical statement, titled "The Jerusalem Declaration on Christian
Zionism," alleged that "Christian Zionism advances racial exclusivity
and perpetual war rather than the Gospel of universal love, redemption
and reconciliation taught by Jesus Christ."
(Zionism refers to the modern movement for a Jewish national homeland,
which started in the 1800s.)
The church leaders' statement also mentioned the Arab-Christian
contention that international Christians who actively support Israel
desire to bring on the Apocalypse and the Second Coming of Jesus.
"Rather than condemn the world to the doom of Armageddon, we call
upon everyone to liberate themselves from the ideologies of militarism
and occupation."
Three Jerusalem-based Christian Zionist leaders -- two Americans
and one South African -- picked up the gauntlet by issuing their own
joint rebuttal one week later. They said that "certain church clerics"
had used "inflammatory language to express views that are far from
the truth."
"Christian Zionism is not heretical. In fact, Christians from all
traditional backgrounds have held such a view for two thousand years,"
said the statement.
It was signed by Malcolm Heading, who leads the 26-year-old
International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem, along with Ray Sanders,
who has headed the Christian Friends of Israel group since 1985,
and Rebecca Brimmer of Bridges for Peace.
Together, the three Jerusalem-based Christian Zionist organizations
maintain staffs of several hundred permanent and volunteer workers,
and branches in dozens of countries around the globe.
The three prominent Christian leaders, who have each lived in Israel
for many years, issued a six-point rebuttal of the Arab bishops'
central charge that Christian Zionism is heretical.
Stating that such Christians believe in a literal interpretation of
the Bible, they pointed out that "replacement theology" (which teaches
that the church has totally supplanted the Jewish people in God's
plans and purposes) has played "a pivotal role in the persecution of
Jews through the centuries."
Addressing the bishop's "apocalypse" contention, the three leaders
wrote that "Christian Zionists do not base their theological positions
on end-time prophecy, but on the faithful covenant promises of God
given to Abraham some four thousand years ago."
The counter-statement ended by noting that the four Jerusalem
church officials had "totally ignored the jihadist goals of the
Hamas government, and turned a blind eye to terrorism perpetrated by
this regime." It added that such a "one-sided unbalanced view of the
conflict is in fact unhelpful to the peace process, and contributing
to its failure."
Christian Embassy spokesman David Parsons told Cybercast News Service
that it was not the first time that the four Arab church leaders had
joined together to attack Christians who support Israel.
He pointed out that the bishops lead flocks "that are actually
fairly small" in the Holy Land, even if they are "part of much larger
international bodies, especially the Roman Catholic Church."
"There are far more Greek Orthodox, Greek Catholic and Armenian
Orthodox Christians living in the land, but their leaders did not
endorse the acerbic statement," Parsons pointed out.
"These four Arab bishops also don't represent the millions of
Catholics, Episcopalians and Lutherans, including the Vatican itself,
who recognize that the biblical covenants made between God and the
Jewish people remain in effect."
The American-born Parsons, who also edits the Jerusalem Post
International Christian Edition and has written extensively about
Christian Zionism, noted that the bishop's August 22nd statement
borrowed heavily from a similar one issued at the end of a 2004
anti-Zionist church conference held in Jerusalem, attended and
addressed by the same four clerics, among others.
Parsons said one of the four Arab church leaders, Nazareth-born
Anglican Bishop Riah Abu El-Assal, is widely known for his outspoken
Palestinian nationalism.
He added that the local Episcopal leader "has publicly stated several
times that Palestinian martyrs, including Muslim suicide terrorists,
receive eternal life."
http://www.cnsnews.com/news/viewstory .asp?Page=/ForeignBureaus/archive/200609/INT200609 06c.html
By David Dolan
CNSNews.com, VA
Sept 6 2006
Jerusalem (CNSNews.com) - Following the recent Israeli-Hizballah war
in Lebanon, four Arab church leaders based in Jerusalem have issued a
scathing attack on Christians who actively support the Jewish state,
indirectly including President George W. Bush.
In a statement published just one week after a United Nations ceasefire
went into effect on August 14, Nazareth-born Roman Catholic Patriarch
Michel Sabbah was joined by two Arab Protestant bishops and one Arab
Orthodox archbishop, in charging that "the Christian Zionist program
provides a worldview where the Gospel is identified with the ideology
of empire, colonialism and militarism."
"We categorically reject Christian Zionist doctrines as false
teaching that corrupts the biblical message of love, justice and
reconciliation," the statement said.
Signed by Syrian Orthodox Archbishop Swerios Malki Mourad, along with
Sabah and the Episcopal and Evangelical Lutheran bishops of Jerusalem,
the joint statement indirectly denounced President Bush for declaring
his support last May for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's plan
to hold onto some Jewish settlements in the disputed West Bank after
unilaterally withdrawing from many others.
"We further reject the contemporary alliance of Christian Zionist
leaders and organizations with elements in the governments of Israel
and the United States that are presently imposing their unilateral
pre-emptive borders and domination over Palestine."
The clerical statement, titled "The Jerusalem Declaration on Christian
Zionism," alleged that "Christian Zionism advances racial exclusivity
and perpetual war rather than the Gospel of universal love, redemption
and reconciliation taught by Jesus Christ."
(Zionism refers to the modern movement for a Jewish national homeland,
which started in the 1800s.)
The church leaders' statement also mentioned the Arab-Christian
contention that international Christians who actively support Israel
desire to bring on the Apocalypse and the Second Coming of Jesus.
"Rather than condemn the world to the doom of Armageddon, we call
upon everyone to liberate themselves from the ideologies of militarism
and occupation."
Three Jerusalem-based Christian Zionist leaders -- two Americans
and one South African -- picked up the gauntlet by issuing their own
joint rebuttal one week later. They said that "certain church clerics"
had used "inflammatory language to express views that are far from
the truth."
"Christian Zionism is not heretical. In fact, Christians from all
traditional backgrounds have held such a view for two thousand years,"
said the statement.
It was signed by Malcolm Heading, who leads the 26-year-old
International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem, along with Ray Sanders,
who has headed the Christian Friends of Israel group since 1985,
and Rebecca Brimmer of Bridges for Peace.
Together, the three Jerusalem-based Christian Zionist organizations
maintain staffs of several hundred permanent and volunteer workers,
and branches in dozens of countries around the globe.
The three prominent Christian leaders, who have each lived in Israel
for many years, issued a six-point rebuttal of the Arab bishops'
central charge that Christian Zionism is heretical.
Stating that such Christians believe in a literal interpretation of
the Bible, they pointed out that "replacement theology" (which teaches
that the church has totally supplanted the Jewish people in God's
plans and purposes) has played "a pivotal role in the persecution of
Jews through the centuries."
Addressing the bishop's "apocalypse" contention, the three leaders
wrote that "Christian Zionists do not base their theological positions
on end-time prophecy, but on the faithful covenant promises of God
given to Abraham some four thousand years ago."
The counter-statement ended by noting that the four Jerusalem
church officials had "totally ignored the jihadist goals of the
Hamas government, and turned a blind eye to terrorism perpetrated by
this regime." It added that such a "one-sided unbalanced view of the
conflict is in fact unhelpful to the peace process, and contributing
to its failure."
Christian Embassy spokesman David Parsons told Cybercast News Service
that it was not the first time that the four Arab church leaders had
joined together to attack Christians who support Israel.
He pointed out that the bishops lead flocks "that are actually
fairly small" in the Holy Land, even if they are "part of much larger
international bodies, especially the Roman Catholic Church."
"There are far more Greek Orthodox, Greek Catholic and Armenian
Orthodox Christians living in the land, but their leaders did not
endorse the acerbic statement," Parsons pointed out.
"These four Arab bishops also don't represent the millions of
Catholics, Episcopalians and Lutherans, including the Vatican itself,
who recognize that the biblical covenants made between God and the
Jewish people remain in effect."
The American-born Parsons, who also edits the Jerusalem Post
International Christian Edition and has written extensively about
Christian Zionism, noted that the bishop's August 22nd statement
borrowed heavily from a similar one issued at the end of a 2004
anti-Zionist church conference held in Jerusalem, attended and
addressed by the same four clerics, among others.
Parsons said one of the four Arab church leaders, Nazareth-born
Anglican Bishop Riah Abu El-Assal, is widely known for his outspoken
Palestinian nationalism.
He added that the local Episcopal leader "has publicly stated several
times that Palestinian martyrs, including Muslim suicide terrorists,
receive eternal life."
http://www.cnsnews.com/news/viewstory .asp?Page=/ForeignBureaus/archive/200609/INT200609 06c.html