Mint Press News July 12th, 2019
The largest pro-Israel organization in the United States is not composed of Jews, but of Christian evangelicals, with a total membership of 7 million, more than 2 million more members than the entirety of the American Jewish community.
Members of this organization,
Christians United for Israel (CUFI), met in Washington on Monday,
attracting thousands of attendees and featuring speeches from Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Secretary of State and former CIA
Director Mike Pompeo, Vice President Mike Pence, and National Security
Advisor John Bolton. CUFI’s leader, controversial evangelical preacher
John Hagee, has met with President Donald Trump several times and was
recently part of an exclusive White House meeting in March on the
administration’s upcoming “peace plan” for Israel and Palestine.
CUFI is but one of many organizations
throughout American history that have promoted the state of Israel and
Zionism on the grounds that a Jewish ethnostate in Palestine is a
requirement for the fulfillment of end-times prophecy and necessary for
Jesus Christ to return to Earth — an event Christians often refer to as
“the Second Coming.”
While organizations like CUFI and its
predecessors have long seen the creation of the state of Israel in
1948, and the later Israeli victory and conquest of Jerusalem in 1967,
as the fulfillment of Biblical prophecy, there is one prophecy that this
sect of evangelical Christians believes is the only thing standing
between them and the Second Coming. There are estimated to be more than 20 million
of these Christians, often referred to as Christian Zionists, in the
United States and they are a key voting bloc and source of political
donations for the Republican Party.
As was explored in previous
installments of this series, these Christian Zionists, much like
religious Zionist extremists in Israel, believe that the Al Aqsa mosque
and the Dome of the Rock must be replaced with a Third Jewish Temple in
order to usher in the end times.
These two groups of different faiths,
since the 19th century, have repeatedly formed an opportunistic
alliance in order to ensure the fulfillment of their respective
prophecies, despite the fact that members of the other faith are rarely
if ever on the same page in their interpretations of what occurs after
the temple’s construction.
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