-Caveat Lector-

Euphorian spotted this on the Guardian Unlimited site and thought you should see it.

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Note from Euphorian:

Scarlett nails for Jesus!
Gotta love it!
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To see this story with its related links on the Guardian Unlimited site, go to 
http://www.guardian.co.uk

Meet the new Zionists
The members of the Christian Coalition of America are some of the most passionate 
defenders of Israel in the United States. There's just one catch: they want to convert 
all Jews to Christianity. Matthew Engel reports on an unholy alliance
Matthew Engel
Sunday October 27 2002
The Observer


At first sight, the scene is very familiar: one that happens in Washington DC and 
other major American cities all the time. On the platform, an Israeli student is 
telling thousands of supporters how the horrors of the year have only reinforced his 
people's determination. "Despite the terror attacks, they'll never drive us away out 
of our God-given land," he says.

This is greeted with whoops and hollers and waving of Israeli flags and the blowing of 
the shofar, the Jewish ceremonial ram's horn. Then comes the mayor of Jerusalem, Ehud 
Olmert, who is received even more rapturously. "God is with us. You are with us." And 
there are more whoops and hollers and flag-waves and shofar-blows.

This support is not offered with any ifs or buts either. The placards round the hall 
insist that every inch of the Holy Land should belong to Israel and that there should 
never be a Palestinian state. These assertions are backed up by biblical quotations. 
It could be a rally in Jerusalem for those Israelis who think Ariel Sharon is a 
dangerous softie.

But something very strange is going on here. There are thousands of people cheering 
for Israel in the huge Washington Convention Centre. But not one of them appears to be 
Jewish, at least not in the conventional sense. For this is the annual gathering of a 
very non-Jewish organisation indeed: the Christian Coalition of America.

And the strangest thing of all is not their support, which is a novel and important 
development in American politics, but the thinking that lies behind it - which is 
altogether more chilling to Israel's traditional supporters than all the cheers and 
flags would suggest. You might also describe it as downright weird.

In a country where weekly church attendance is about 20 times the level it is in 
Britain (40% v 2%), the relationship between religion and politics in the US is 
intense. And there is little doubt that, last spring, when President Bush dithered and 
dallied over his Middle East policy before finally coming down on Israel's side, he 
was influenced not by the overrated Jewish vote, but by the opinion of Christian 
"religious conservatives" - the self-description of between 15 and 18% of the 
electorate. When the president demanded that Israel withdraw its tanks from the West 
Bank in April, the White House allegedly received 100,000 angry emails from Christian 
conservatives.

A decade ago, when the president's father was in the White House, his eldest son's 
election-time job was to act as unofficial ambassador to this group, offer assurances 
that they and the administration were at one on such matters as abortion and 
pornography and prayer in schools, the issues they like to group together as "family 
values". US-Israel relations, which reached rock bottom when George Bush Sr was 
president and the obstreperous Yitzhak Shamir was Israeli prime minister, were never 
an issue.

What's changed? Not the Book of Genesis, which is what Michael Brown, the coalition's 
church liaison officer, quotes when you ask him to explain the support for Israel. 
"And I will make of thee a great nation," the Lord told Abraham, "And I will bless 
them that bless thee and curse them that curse thee."

On the conference floor, however, the explanation has more to do with the end of the 
world than the start of it. What has really changed is the emergence of the doctrine 
known as "dispensationalism", popularised in the novels of the Rev Tim LaHaye and 
Jerry Jenkins. LaHaye and Jenkins may not mean much to you or to the readers of the 
New York Times Book Review, but the ninth volume of their Left Behind series sold 
three million hardback copies in the US last year, eclipsing John Grisham.

Central to the theory - based on a reading of scripture Brown would prefer not to 
discuss - is the Rapture, the second coming of Christ, which will presage the end of 
the world. A happy ending depends on the conversion of the Jews. And that, to cut a 
long story very short, can only happen if the Jews are in possession of all the lands 
given to them by God. In other words, these Christians are supporting the Jews in 
order to abolish them.

Oh yes, agreed Marion Pollard, a charming lady from Dallas who was selling 
hand-painted Jerusalem crystal in the exhibition hall at the conference. "God is the 
sovereign. He'll do what he pleases. But based on the scripture, those are the 
guidelines." She calls herself a fervent supporter of Israel, as does Lewis Hall of 
North Carolina. "I believe they do have to accept the Messiah." And if they don't? "I 
believe they will when they know who He is. I believe that one day they are going to 
wake up. It might take a third world war to do that."

Meanwhile, outside the hall was Leanne Cariker from Oklahoma, carrying a placard 
saying "Just Say No! To A Palestinian State". Her support of Israel is based on the 
same premise. "The Bible says there is no way to worship God except through the son," 
she explains.

To add to the bizarreness of this scene, she was standing opposite another group of 
demonstrators: anti-Zionist Hasidic Jews from Brooklyn in long black coats, who oppose 
the state of Israel based on their own reading of the Bible. Confused? You should be. 
Poor Leanne Cariker was. "I'm not against them," she wailed. "I'm for them. I believe 
they're God's chosen people."

You might think these Christian activists represent the furthest shores of American 
politico-religious wackiness. The politicians don't think so. This conference began 
with a videotaped benediction straight from the Oval office. Some of the most 
influential republicans in Congress addressed the gathering including - not once, but 
twice - Tom DeLay, who is hot favourite to take over as majority leader of the House 
of Representatives after the midterm elections on November 5, thus becoming arguably 
the most powerful man on Capitol Hill.

"Are you tired of all this, are you?" he yelled to the audience. "Nooooooo!" they 
roared back. "Not when you're standing up for Jews and Jesus, that's for sure," he 
replied.

Jews habitually do not stand up for Jesus (although this conference did have a 
sprinkling of Messianic Jews, who do just that). But most Jewish leaders have opted to 
shrug, accept the Christians' support and let them whistle for their conversions. That 
certainly goes for Ariel Sharon, the Israeli prime minister, reportedly greeted "like 
a rock star" by Christian evangelicals in Jerusalem last month. More thoughtful 
leaders are at least concerned.

"I'm going to take the support because Israel needs it," said Rabbi Jerome Epstein, 
vice-president of the US's conservative (in this context middle-of-the-road) Jewish 
organisation, the United Synagogue. "Their theology is in a different world. We can 
cope with it. If I convince them not to support Israel, are they going to give up 
their attempt to convert Jews? No."

Not everyone accepts this. "They don't love the real Jewish people," the author 
Gershom Gorenberg told the CBS programme 60 Minutes. "They love us as characters in 
their story, in their play, and that's not who we are. If you listen to the drama that 
they are describing, essentially it's a five-act play in which the Jews disappear in 
the fourth act."

This is not something speakers at the rally are anxious to emphasise. DeLay was 
followed by Pat Robertson, the coalition's founder, sometime presidential candidate 
and the very personification of the successful American TV evangelist: blow-dried 
hair, stick-on smile, expensive suit, honeyed voice and certainty of tone.

Robertson prefers to dwell on Arab plans to drive Israel into the sea and the iniquity 
of Yasser Arafat and "his gang of thugs". But he also cites the stories of Joshua and 
David to prove Israel's ownership of Jerusalem "long before anyone had heard of 
Mohammed".

Robertson has now retired from the coalition, leaving it in the hands of Roberta 
Combs, a grandmother from South Carolina who has the longest and most scarlet 
fingernails I have ever seen. She scratches them across the table when she wants to 
make a point. In an interview, her most vigorous point is in support of Bush. "I think 
he's a great president. I think he's a caring person. First of all, he's a Christian, 
which I identify with. He's pro-family, he's pro-life, he's a friend of mine."

Combs is not in the Robertson league as a communicator. And when I shift the 
conversation round to Israel, she discovers an urgent need to attend to her toddler 
grandson, leaving me with her aide Michael Brown. The prevailing view is that the 
coalition, a powerful voice in the early 90s, is not the force it was.

This is partly held to be due to her failings, and partly to the rhetorical excesses 
of Robertson and his ally Jerry Falwell, leader of the Moral Majority, especially in 
September last year when Falwell, on Robertson's TV show, blamed the attacks on, among 
others, "the pagans and the abortionists and the feminists and the gays and the 
lesbians".

The other week Falwell called Mohammed a terrorist, which might have accounted for his 
unexplained non-appearance at the conference. But even the coalition's most tireless 
opponent does not sense any kind of victory. Rev Barry Lynn, himself an ordained 
minister and head of the pressure group Americans United for Separation of Church and 
State, likes to start his speeches by saying: "The good news is that the Christian 
Coalition is fundamentally collapsing. The bad news is that the people who ran it are 
all in the government." Whenever he goes over to the department of justice, he keeps 
running into Pat Robertson's old lawyers.

The linkage between the Christian right and the Republican party is getting ever 
stronger, especially in the electorally crucial states of the south and west. And Lynn 
is alarmed at the prospects for the midterm elections. The Republicans are quite 
likely to regain control of the Senate, removing the roadblock that currently stops 
the president appointing conservative judges ("impartial judges", according to most 
Republicans; "rabid rightwingers," according to their opponents) to lower courts and, 
when the expected vacancies arise, to the supreme court. This will give the right, and 
most particularly the religious right, unprecedented influence over all three branches 
of government in Washington.

"Karl Rove [Bush's political guru] has said publicly you cannot alienate your base. 
You cannot alienate that 18% of religious conservatives. You don't mess with these 
people," says Lynn. "They want you to be just as they are. And Bush is just as they 
are. He may waffle on one or two issues, such as stem-cell research. But fundamentally 
he comes down on their side."

In the short term this might not alter American life all that much. It might take a 
generation for the Supreme Court to roll back the restrictions that, for instance, 
forbid prayer in school. The abortion debate is for the moment dormant. Neither the 
churches nor the government show any sign of imposing teenage sexual abstinence any 
time soon. Not before, say, the conversion of the Jews.

One of the points Robertson likes to emphasise is to reject accusations that the 
coalition's support of Israel is a "Johnny come lately experience". "We've been with 
them through thick and thin," he says. This is a point made by several of his 
supporters, one of whom presses on me a little booklet with quotes from Christian 
theologians on the subject. He especially recommends the one from Jonathan Edwards, 
the 18th-century puritan divine. "The Jews in all their dispersions shall cast away 
their old infidelity," said Edwards, "and shall have their hearts wonderfully changed, 
and abhor themselves for their past unbelief and obstinacy. They shall flow together 
to the blessed Jesus."

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited

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