Israel really shouldn't be divisive for Christians.
Judaism is an antichrist religion (1 John 2:22). In fact,
it is by definition, as it was the very first religion to reject Christ, and
the example to those other religions that did so. This is a core tenet of
Christianity and Orthodox Judaism.
Israel is not a Christian country. It is a country where
Christians are barely permitted at best and sometimes persecuted. Only
Christians are God's people (1 Peter 2:9-10; 1 John 3), so we have no natural
affinity with the country, either spiritually or ethnically, it's just another
country filled with lost people.
Therefore, all Christians should see Israel as a largely
godless country, just like Australia, Belgium, Canada or Vietnam, that needs
vast missionary work to bring back to Christ. A nation in need of hearing about
God, because if you don't know Jesus, you can't know God. This is all basic
Christian stuff.
So why is it so divisive?
Because a large segment of the Church, mostly influenced
by American teaching, from a theology that originated in Britain, has taken the
most divisive thing in Christianity, eschatology, or end times teaching, and
dragged it into the foreground of the present day and said, "See, we are in the final, or
close to final generation, because this has all been fulfilled." They have
made a tertiary thing, almost a primary emphasis.
In other words, a large section of the church has taken
the most disputable parts of Scripture, developed a novel interpretation that
dates back less than 200 years, and brought it to the forefront of their
emphasis in a major way. As if theology were not already divisive enough, it gets
far worse when people bring to the forefront the most difficult passages in the
Bible, which have always caused massive disagreement in the church.
This has happened before. In the Reformation many
chiliastic groups believed they were in the actual fulfilment of Revelation,
that the pope was clearly the last Antichrist, and they got behind all sorts of
political expressions of this theology, and the result was war (see the Debacle
at Muster as one example), divisions like the Church had never seen, and
disasters across Christendom. In fact, these disasters helped ensure the
decline of Christendom. Because the divisive nature of it all drove much of Europe,
especially among the powerful and influential, to Deism. The exact nature of
these groups beliefs is not relevant. What is relevant is how they brought the
most divisive passages of Scripture to the foreground and made them their
focus.
Large segments of the Church are doing this today.
Take eschatology out of the picture, and Israel are an
unsaved nation that needs evangelising just like any other nation. Any
Christian of any theology can see this.
But bring back in a radical interpretation of Eschatology,
that steps outside of Church history, and now Israel are God's people in a
desperate fight to reclaim the Holy Land. And those who criticize them are
attacking God's people. Therefore, beware!
Eschatology has always been divisive. Through most of
Church history, the church teachers put it to the side as a second order or
even third order doctrine. Orthodox Churches simply proclaimed the return of
Christ. But when enough of the Church forgets how important it is to do this,
it can have massive negative political implications which even effect world
politics.
This is something to think about.
Even if your eschatology is right, and it's presumptuous
for any of us to think that way, when an eschatology creates such an unhealthy
focus, that should be a warning sign that something is amiss. Especially if it changes your view on who the people of God are. The Bible is not unclear about
that. All who are in Christ are of God, all who are not are not of God. This
clarity should be prioritized over the unclarity of eschatology.
Amen brother.
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