Fighting the lie: what Evangelicals don’t believe about the Second Coming

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I was disturbed to read an interview recently conducted by pundit Michael Medved.  His interviewee? Jimmy Carter.  Mr. Medved’s concern was the former President’s naïveté concerning Hamas and that group’s less than charitable intentions vis-à-vis Israel.

But that wasn’t what caught my eye.  Buried in the conversation was the revelation that Mr. Carter has fallen for the canard that Evangelicals are awaiting (perhaps with some relish) the wholesale slaughter of the Jews in connection with the prophesied Second Coming of Christ.  Notice this exchange, in which MM stands for Michael Medved:

Carter: —I’m not going to try to defend the Hamas Charter any more than I would try to defend the PLO charter, because it calls for the destruction of Israel—

MM: —It calls for the murder of individual Jews. It calls for the murder of all Jews so that judgment day can come. It says, “The Islamic Resistance Movement aspires to the realization of Allah’s promise, no matter how long that should take. The Prophet, Allah bless him and grant him salvation, has said, “The day of judgment will not come about until Muslims kill the Jews (and the passage adds: “When the Jews will hide behind stones and trees, the sones and trees will say, O Muslim, O Abdulla, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him.”)

Carter:–If you want to talk about ancient history, Christians believe that in the second coming, Christ can’t come back to the Holy Land until all Jews are either dead or become Christian.

There’s plenty here which is interesting, but Carter’s take on what Christians believe is simply untrue.  Far be it from me to argue with a Sunday School teacher, but as someone who’s taught a bit of Sunday School himself, I feel compelled to point out a few things.

First, in the interest of fairness, it should be said that many Christians’ presentation of prophesied “end times” events is, well, graceless.  Perhaps we can be excused for not always knowing how to talk about the end of the world – a serious topic, to be sure – but a little tact is in order.  Christians who read their Bible literally believe that Jesus Christ will physically return to the earth after a period of terrible wars and cataclysms.  Believers argue about a lot of the details, and how it all fits together exactly, but one point of agreement is that it will be horrific.

So, in the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 24, Jesus says, “For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be. And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved…” So Christ is speaking of a time so terrible that, unless God intervened personally, no one would survive it.  It will be that bad.

Second, Christians point to prophecies in the Old Testament (Hebrew Bible) indicating that a great many Jews will be killed through anti-Semitic persecution during this time.  Most notable here would probably be Zechariah 13:8, which says, “And it shall come to pass, that in all the land, saith the LORD, two parts therein shall be cut off and die; but the third shall be left therein.” However, while many Christians believe this will literally happen, they are not in any sense “rooting” for it to happen, nor should it ever be compared to the Islamic belief that Jews must be killed by Muslims in order for their own apocalypse to come to pass. In the Christian end times scenario, the Jews are indeed victims of war and victims of persecution at the hands of the figure known as the Antichrist.  Mr. Carter should know better than to insinuate an equivalence between the two.

Finally, Christian teaching is clear that Christians then living will also suffer persecution from the Antichrist.  Indeed, abundant Christian martyrdom is an expected part of the last days scenario.  Jews and Christians are thus suffering together from the Antichrist’s pogrom or Holocaust.

Christians should not be faulted for believing that Christ will come again and that, when he does, Jews will take him as their Messiah.  They are entitled to believe that, just as Jews believe the Christians are wrong about that.  But Christians should not be smeared as though they believed something other than what they do believe.  Such irresponsible distortions have the effect of dissolving the unity that can exist between Christians of goodwill and Jews of goodwill as they work together against their common enemies, of which there are many.

WTIC lays off Colin McEnroe

…and Diane Smith, according to this article in the Courant. Is this more evidence of the decline of Old Media or an attempt to do something else, which would be to slightly de-politicize the station, perhaps?

Steve Salhany, operations manager at [parent company] CBS Radio/Hartford, said the new lineup was intended to help provide listeners with the political and economic information they need, as well as a vehicle to voice their opinions on important issues.

“We believe increasing our live news coverage and providing listeners with more ways to interact with the station is the right direction for WTIC to be moving as we all look for ways to better adapt to the changing business environment,” Salhany said.

I’ll be curious to see what Ms. Smith and Mr. McEnroe do next. In particular I’m tempted to think McEnroe will fare quite well on his own should he wish to develop his own punditry brand. I think he needs to go out and register colinmcenroe.com before someone squats on it.

Follow-up here from Roger Catlin.

Obama creates shock, fury by picking Rick Warren

President-elect Obama has angered many supporters – and probably many detractors – by asking California Pastor Rick Warren to give the invocation at the upcoming inaugural ceremonies. Politico.com reports:

“Your invitation to Reverend Rick Warren to deliver the invocation at your inauguration is a genuine blow to LGBT Americans,” the president of Human Rights Campaign, Joe Solomonese, wrote Obama Wednesday. “[W]e feel a deep level of disrespect when one of architects and promoters of an anti-gay agenda is given the prominence and the pulpit of your historic nomination.”

The rapid, angry reaction from a range of gay activists comes as the gay rights movement looks for an opportunity to flex its political muscle. Last summer gay groups complained, but were rebuffed by Obama, when an “ex-gay” singer led Obama’s rallies in South Carolina. And many were shocked last month when voters approved the California ban.

“There is a lot of energy and there’s a lot of anger and I think people are wanting to direct it somewhere,” Solomonese told Politico.

The selection of Warren to preside at the inauguration is not a surprise move, but it is a mirror image of President Bill Clinton’s early struggles with issues of gay rights. Obama has worked, and at times succeeded, to bridge the gap between Democrats and evangelical Christians, who form a solid section of the Republican base.

Warren has been more outspoken than usual lately about issues seen as purely moral, particularly gay marriage. This was unavoidable given the fur flying in California over Proposition 8. A CNN piece pointed out Warren’s objections, the kinds of objections that make sense but don’t get much airplay these days.

Warren’s support of California’s Proposition 8, a measure that outlaws same sex marriage in the state, sparked the ire of many gay rights proponents earlier this fall.

Warren, who has made it a practice not to endorse candidates or political parties, wrote in October that the issue of gay marriage is not a political issue, but instead “a moral issue that God has spoken clearly about.”

“For 5,000 years, every culture and every religion — not just Christianity — has defined marriage as a contract between men and women,” Warren wrote in a newsletter to his congregation. “There is no reason to change the universal, historical definition of marriage to appease 2 percent of our population.”

Warren also stirred controversy earlier this week when he told Beliefnet.com his grounds for opposing same-sex marriage laid primarily on his right of free speech.

“There were all kinds of threats that if [Proposition 8] did not pass, then any pastor could be considered doing hate speech if he shared his views that he didn’t think homosexuality was the most natural way for relationships, and that would be hate speech.”

Warren has also spoken out against abortion and defended Christians from the knocks they have taken (unwarranted in my view) for being “single-issue voters.” In a recent interview with Beliefnet, Warren outlines a fascinating discussion he had with Democratic senators:

And I went around the room and when I came to Chuck Schumer I said, “Chuck, how bad, if you had a candidate and he was right in EVERY SINGLE AREA that you agreed with but he’s a holocaust denier, there’s no way you’re gonna vote for a holocaust denier. That’s a single issue issue for you. And I said, “For these people who believe life begins at birth, alright–at conception–it’s an America holocaust. They believe that there’s 40 million people who should be here. And to them that’s an issue.”

These views may be starting to change some people’s views of Warren, sometimes seen as the poster child for a New Evangelicalism that isn’t as in-your-face about the contents of the Gospel and moral issues. But Warren has probably never been what the political Left would like people to believe he is.

Likewise, many Evangelicals have been uncomfortable with Warren because of this perceived overemphasis on social action at the expense of evangelism. Warren himself seems to be annoyed at this and takes pains to correct false impressions, as seen in a USA Today profile earlier this month:

He never stopped planting churches, he says, but as he spoke around the world, he realized government, business and non-profits could all share in efforts to reconcile global conflict.

“All of a sudden, I started having people of goodwill who were not Christian or not church members saying, ‘We’d like to do that. We’d like to partner with you on helping the poor. We’d like to help end AIDS. We’d like to help end corruption and injustice.’

“So,” he says, “I started making the appeal for people of goodwill, whether they happened to believe, as I do, that Jesus Christ is the son of God, or not, to work together on the areas where we can work together, and not worry about the areas where we can’t.”

Says Warren, “We’ll work with anybody who wants to stop AIDS.” And that, he says, “really makes the fundamentalists mad.”

“But when people say Saddleback is not a evangelistic church,” or that Warren is not standing for Christ all the time, “there’s a spiritual term for that,” he says.

“It’s when you cross an abalone with a crocodile. It’s a crock of baloney.”

If he can infuriate so many different kinds of people he must be doing something right.

Praying for Connecticut’s economy

The economy is on all our minds and the news goes from bad to worse.  With the State deficit ballooning, Governor Rell is looking to put a moratorium on foredclosures.  However, she’s also said that bringing back the tolls is not an option for her.

Earlier this week The Courant told us just how bad it is:

In Connecticut, Rell must erase a current-year deficit of more than $300 million and also close a $6 billion shortfall in the new two-year budget.

Economists who recently briefed Rell on the recession said the state is facing not only a cyclical downturn, but also structural changes in the region’s economy.

Klepper-Smith said the state can expect to lose 60,000 to 80,000 jobs, many of them from the financial services sector important in Hartford and Fairfield counties.

Edward J. Deak, a Fairfield University economics professor who also has advised Rell, said the structural changes mean some of those losses will be permanent.

“Even as we pull ourselves out of the cyclical recession, we’re going to have to pay attention to the fact that the financial system that we’ve known and loved is gone, it’s not there anymore,” Deak said.

Public colleges are also in trouble.

Some are excited about the claim that gay marriage will boost our economy and that of Massachusetts.  But the $13M that might produce is a drop in the bucket.  Also, I’m not sure we wish to be known as the Las Vegas of gay marriage.

Let’s remember to pray for the State economy!

New administration to promote abortion abroad

MSNBC is reporting that the incoming Obama Administration will rescind the executive order which prohibits foreign groups which receive U. S. aid from counseling women about abortion.

The new president is also expected to lift a so-called global gag rule barring international family planning groups that receive U.S. aid from counseling women about the availability of abortion, even in countries where the procedure is legal, said Cecile Richards, the president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America. When Bill Clinton took office in 1993, he rescinded the Reagan-era regulation, known as the Mexico City policy, but Bush reimposed it.

“We have been communicating with his transition staff” almost daily, Richards said. “We expect to see a real change.”

Note that despite the plethora of problems facing us, the President-Elect’s team feels it necessary to meet with Planned Parenthood almost every day.

Obama and the Evangelicals

How many did he really reach? Not as many as one might have thought in the months leading up to November 4.  Says Time:

And yet despite the inroads Obama made with religious constituencies, there is one voting bloc that remains largely unmoved by Obamamania: white Evangelicals. One-quarter of them voted for Obama on Tuesday — despite a warning from conservative columnist Janet Porter that they could be risking their eternal souls by doing so — an improvement on John Kerry’s dismal showing in 2004. But against a candidate like McCain, who is famously disliked by many Evangelicals, in a campaign in which Democrats engaged in a record level of outreach to Evangelicals, and at a time when the Evangelical community is expanding its consciousness to focus on traditionally Democratic issues like the environment and poverty, this would have been the year for a real shift of support to take place. So why didn’t that happen?

Interesting stuff – see more here.

Your daddy could be in the military for another hundred years!

Watch this teacher, said to be from Asheville, North Carolina, verbally terrorize a young child. We should never wonder why people are so distrustful of, and disgusted by, the public schools in so many places across the nation. Over-the-top politicking and social engineering – it has to stop. (From a Swedish doumentary.)

Proposition 8 and Connecticut

As mentioned earlier, Connecticut voters refused to approve a Constitutional Convention which could have overturned gay marriage in our State.  California voters, dare I say owing to their greater familiarity with both the style and the substance of the homosexual activist movement, appear to have handed a tremendous victory to pro-family forces across the nations.  Today’s Wall Street Journal says:

Proposition 8, which would establish marriage as a union between a man and a woman, passed with 52.1% of the vote, against 47.9% opposed, with 94.6% of precincts reporting. The approval marks a stunning upset in a $70 million campaign that just weeks ago looked to be running in favor of preserving gay marriage rights.

The passage of Prop 8, as it is known, would be a major victory for religious conservatives seeking to ban gay marriage in other states, and a crippling setback for the gay rights movement nationwide.

Indeed.  But what to do in States such as ours or Massachusetts, in which the right to gay marriage has been enshrined as a matter of State Constitutional law?  When the highest judges in the land, elected by none and accountable to none, can create such a right as God made the world – out of nothing – and the people have no remedy available to them, what can pro-family forces do?

The fact that a “liberal” State like California, known for its large and very influential gay population, has spoken against gay marriage speaks volumes.  As the FIC Blog points out today, some 30 states have already voted to protect marriage as it has been traditionally understood.

And what’s wrong with that?

Easy victories in Connecticut Congressional Races

Democrats prevailed easily all over Connecticut yesterday:

District 1: Incumbent John Larson pulled in 70% of the vote, acing Joe Visconti.

District 2: Incumbent Joe Courtney topped Sean Sullivan, 66% – 32%.

District 3: Incumbent and Congresswoman-for-Life Rosa DeLauro grabbed 76%, while the GOP candidate, Bo Itshaky could only manage 21%.

District 4: In the only close contest, newcomer Jim Himes bested Christopher Shays, 51-48. This ends over two decades of service for Shays.

District 5: Incumbent Chris Murphy defeated David Cappiello, 59% to 39%.

Christopher Shays defeated

Congressman-Elect Jim Himes

Congressman-Elect Jim Himes

Also making national news tonight was the victory of Jim Himes over veteran Rep. Christopher Shays.  U. S. News & World Report introduces us to Mr. Himes:

The victor is Himes, 42, former vice president of Goldman Sachs. Himes, who has styled himself as bringing “a real-world perspective to Washington,” targeted Shays as a party-line candidate out of touch with voters. That stung the candidate, who built his career on his ideological independence. Called by the New York Times which endorsed him—a “rare champion these days of Republican moderation,” Shays advocated increasing the minimum wage, expanding children’s healthcare, and reforming campaign finance. In fact, says Michael Sohn, his six-time campaign manager, it’s Himes who doesn’t think independently. “All he does is read off the talking points of the DCCC,” he says.

Shays had been the only remaining House Republican in all of New England.