If evangelical Christians are hesitant to support Ron Paul's
candidacy for the Republican nomination for President, two
reasons are usually proffered: he does not support Israel,
and he wants to bring the troops home from Iraq.
Unfortunately, many (if not most) of today's evangelical
Christians have bought into the whole neocon warmongering
mentality. Somewhere along the way, evangelicals have forgotten
the historic Christian understanding of "just war,"
not to mention our Savior's promise of divine blessing upon
peacemakers. They have allowed President George W. Bush and
his fellow warmongers to hijack the legitimate use of defensive
war and turn it into a commitment to aggressive and preemptive
war.
If the United States continues on its current path of aggressive,
preemptive war, incessant nation-building, empire-building,
and globalism, our country will collapse. If history teaches
us anything, it teaches us that no super-power can long survive
global warfare. The economic, moral, and spiritual strain
on the nation would be more than it could long endure. In
other words, Bush's war doctrine has put America on a crash
course with disaster, and evangelicals are downright foolish
to go along with it.
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Ron Paul is anything but a pacifist. He is a U.S. Air Force
veteran, for goodness' sake. He believes in Ronald Reagan's
"Peace Through Strength" philosophy. He believes
in a strong military. He believes in defending the United
States. That is not in question.
Obviously, however, Ron Paul rejects nation-building, empire-building,
preemptive war, and globalism. By the way, this is something
the Republican Party also used to reject before George W.
Bush came along. And please understand, this is something
that the vast majority--and I mean vast majority--of the American
people also reject. If the GOP nominates a pro-Iraq war, pro-attack
Iran, pro-preemptive invasion, pro-aggressive war candidate,
they can kiss the November elections goodbye. The American
people (except for the most fanatically loyal Bush supporters)
are sick to death of American soldiers and Marines dying for
Mideast oil, million-dollar Halliburton contracts, and "surrender-your-liberties-because-we-are-at-war"
dribble. However, it is evangelical Christians' misunderstanding
of Ron Paul's position on Israel that seems to be the most
problematic.
To be sure, not all believers agree on the subject of Israel.
Christians are divided between pre-millennialism, post-millennialism,
and even amillennialism. For the most part, pre-millennialists
(such as me) believe that God will yet fulfill the Davidic
Covenant with the nation of Israel. Post-millennialists, on
the other hand, believe that the Church, which is the Body
of Christ, is the complete fulfillment of God's promises to
Abraham and David.
Regardless of one's particular view of Eschatology, believers
should be united in their support for protecting the sovereignty
and independence of these United States. If this were really
true, the vast majority of believers would enthusiastically
support the candidacy of Ron Paul, as there is no one in Washington,
D.C., who more faithfully defends the integrity of America's
sovereignty and independence. The problem is, some Christians
seem to give more loyalty and support to the government of
Israel than they do their own country's independence and freedom.
In this regard, it is incredible to me how evangelical pastors
and leaders can continue to associate with--and support--radical
Israel apologists such as John Hagee. His ranting about Jewish
people having a special covenant with God and needing not
to come to the Father through Christ--and even that Jesus
never claimed to be Christ--is nothing short of blatant apostasy.
Whether one believes in a future Davidic Kingdom or not is
immaterial to the preservation of America's freedom and independence.
If God intends a future place and purpose for Israel, He is
certainly capable of fulfilling that place and purpose. He
will not need your help, my help, or Ron Paul's help. I know
that is shocking to the pride and arrogance of many evangelicals,
but it is true nonetheless.
Does that mean that an American President should deliberately
inflict harm upon the State of Israel? As long as they do
not inflict harm upon us, no. No more than he should deliberately
inflict harm upon any nation that does not inflict harm upon
us. A free and independent nation--not to mention a nation
whose roots are grounded in Christian philosophy--should seek
only that which promotes peace and prosperity. Of all people,
Christians should understand this. Ron Paul does understand
this.
Accordingly, Ron Paul rightly wants to return America's foreign
policy to the established and historic principles of its founding
documents and sentiments. That means free and fair trade with
all and entangling alliances with none. Not even Israel.
My dear Christian brethren, let's get real: America's policies
toward Israel have not been a blessing to her. They have been
a curse. George W. Bush and most other Presidents during the
last 40 years have treated Israel like the proverbial red-headed
step-child.
For example, America continues to furnish Israel's enemies
with three times more aid and assistance than it does Israel.
Three times. Is that being a blessing to Israel? America gives
unflinching and magnanimous support to militant Muslim governments
such as Saudi Arabia. There is no nation in the Middle East
that has harbored, trained, supplied, and supported more terrorists
than Saudi Arabia. Is that being a blessing to Israel? In
addition, every time an American President wants to meddle
in Middle Eastern affairs, he insists that Israel give up
land for peace. President Bush is doing that very thing anew
and afresh at this very moment. Is that being a blessing to
Israel?
Let me assure the reader (if he or she needs assurance) that
Israel knows how to defend itself. In fact, Israel has over
300 nuclear weapons. Israel has enough weaponry and nuclear
capability to take out any threat to its sovereignty that
any Arab nation--or group of Arab nations--could mount against
it.
Herein lies another problem: it is a heavy-handed, dictatorial,
do-as-I-say foreign policy from Washington, D.C., that prevents
Israel from defending itself. Before Tel Aviv can do anything,
it must come hat-in-hand to Washington for permission.
If Iraq was a legitimate threat, Israel could have taken
out Baghdad, Saddam Hussein, and his entire army with little
difficulty. The same is true right now with Iran. If Iran
is a legitimate threat, Israel could launch whatever attack
is necessary to defend itself. It should not need Washington's
permission. Israel is a sovereign nation. It should have the
right to defend itself as it deems necessary. Frankly, it
is none of Washington's business. The truth is, Israel's perennial
precariousness is a direct result of Washington's constant
interference.
Ron Paul would put an end to Washington's deleterious and
insatiable appetite for nation-building and entangling alliances.
The result would be a stronger Israel and a more stable Middle
East. Not to mention the lack of resentment and hatred that
results from the worldwide perception that America is an arrogant
and bullying country.
Furthermore, Christians need to understand that Jewish interests
are not always harmonious with the interests of Christianity
or the interests of the United States. Israel certainly did
not act in a friendly fashion when it attacked the Navy intelligence
ship, the USS Liberty, in 1967. That attack was the second
deadliest against a U.S. vessel since the end of World War
II. The attack also marked the single greatest loss of life
by the U.S. intelligence community. 34 U.S. servicemen were
killed and 173 were wounded in that attack. In addition, Israel
is often found to be engaged in espionage within the United
States. Should America turn a blind eye to such activities?
Of course not.
Beyond that, Hebrew Christians are still pretty much regarded
as second-class citizens in Israel. There is no freedom of
religion for Christians in Israel. I have spoken at the only
two Baptist churches in Israel (at that time): the First Bible
Baptist Church in Jerusalem and the Bible Baptist Church in
Bethlehem. The vast majority of the churches' members were
Palestinian or Arab; they were not Jewish. Most of the opposition
to Christianity in Israel comes from Jews not Arabs.
Evangelical Christians in the United States also need to
seriously consider the impact of America's actions upon the
Christian missionaries throughout the world, but especially
in the Middle Eastern world. There are numerous Christian
missionaries throughout the Muslim states. Ask any of them
and they will tell you that America's meddlesome foreign policy
makes their job harder--not easier.
What I am saying is that Ron Paul's position on Israel is
not problematic for Israel's future security or prosperity.
And neither is it problematic for America's future security
and prosperity. In fact, Ron Paul's foreign policy is compatible
with both historic American principles--not to mention constitutional
government--and with deeply regarded Christian principles.
The real problem is that many evangelical Christians have
themselves lost their appreciation and understanding of these
principles.