Visions of Armageddon
Neo-cons
Hoping for WWIII
Dear
Deep Insider friends,
I
have been receiving information all along on the powerful influence of
certain fundamental Christian groups who believe that there must be a
third world war (a.k.a. armageddon) which starts in Israel in order for
prophecies to be fulfilled so that Christ will come again.
These groups are actively supporting Israel's hawk-like
conservatives and strongly oppose an independent state for the
Palestinians. They are actually hoping for WWIII to come soon! The below
article in the Village Voice reveals some powerful information
on the connection between these groups and the White House. The truth is
coming out!
Take
care and have a great day,
Fred
http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0420/perlstein.php
The Jesus Landing Pad
by Rick
Perlstein
May 18th, 2004 10:00 AM
It
was an e-mail we weren't meant to see. Not for our eyes were the notes that
showed White House staffers taking two-hour meetings with Christian
fundamentalists, where they passed off bogus social science on gay marriage
as if it were holy writ and issued fiery warnings that "the Presidents
[sic] Administration and current Government is engaged in cultural,
economical, and social struggle on every level"—this to a group whose
representative in Israel believed herself to have been attacked by witchcraft
unleashed by proximity to a volume of Harry Potter. Most of all,
apparently, we're not supposed to know the National Security Council's top
Middle East aide consults with apocalyptic Christians eager to ensure
American policy on Israel conforms with their sectarian doomsday scenarios.
But now we know.
"Everything that you're discussing is information you're
not supposed to have," barked Pentecostal minister Robert G. Upton when
asked about the off-the-record briefing his delegation received on March 25.
Details of that meeting appear in a confidential memo signed by Upton and
obtained by the Voice.
The e-mailed meeting summary reveals NSC Near East and
North African Affairs director Elliott Abrams sitting down with the Apostolic
Congress and massaging their theological concerns. Claiming to be "the
Christian Voice in the Nation's Capital," the members vociferously
oppose the idea of a Palestinian state. They fear an Israeli withdrawal from
Gaza might enable just that, and they object on the grounds that all of Old
Testament Israel belongs to the Jews. Until Israel is intact and Solomon's
temple rebuilt, they believe, Christ won't come back to earth.
Abrams attempted to assuage their concerns by stating that
"the Gaza Strip had no significant Biblical influence such as Joseph's
tomb or Rachel's tomb and therefore is a piece of land that can be sacrificed
for the cause of peace."
Three weeks after the confab, President George W. Bush
reversed long-standing U.S. policy, endorsing Israeli sovereignty over parts
of the West Bank in exchange for Israel's disengagement from the Gaza Strip.
In an interview with the Voice, Upton denied having
written the document, though it was sent out from an e-mail account of one of
his staffers and bears the organization's seal, which is nearly identical to
the Great Seal of the United States. Its idiosyncratic grammar and punctuation
tics also closely match those of texts on the Apostolic Congress's website,
and Upton verified key details it recounted, including the number of
participants in the meeting ("45 ministers including wives") and
its conclusion "with a heart-moving send-off of the President in his
Presidential helicopter."
Upton refused to confirm further details.
Affiliated with the United Pentecostal Church, the
Apostolic Congress is part of an important and disciplined political
constituency courted by recent Republican administrations. As a subset of the
broader Christian Zionist movement, it has a lengthy history of opposition to
any proposal that will not result in what it calls a "one-state
solution" in Israel.
The White House's association with the congress, which has
just posted a new staffer in Israel who may be running afoul of Israel's
strict anti-missionary laws, also raises diplomatic concerns.
The staffer, Kim Hadassah Johnson, wrote in a report
obtained by the Voice, "We are establishing the Meet the Need
Fund in Israel—'MNFI.' . . . The fund will be an Interest Free Loan Fund that
will enable us to loan funds to new believers (others upon application) who
need assistance. They will have the opportunity to repay the loan (although
it will not be mandatory)." When that language was read to Moshe Fox,
minister for public and interreligious affairs at the Israeli Embassy in
Washington, he responded, "It sounds against the law which prohibits any
kind of money or material [inducement] to make people convert to another
religion. That's what it sounds like." (Fox's judgment was e-mailed to
Johnson, who did not return a request for comment.)
The Apostolic Congress dates its origins to 1981, when,
according to its website, "Brother Stan Wachtstetter was able to open
the door to Apostolic Christians into the White House." Apostolics, a
sect of Pentecostals, claim legitimacy as the heirs of the original church
because they, as the 12 apostles supposedly did, baptize converts in the name
of Jesus, not in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Ronald Reagan
bore theological affinities with such Christians because of his belief that
the world would end in a fiery Armageddon. Reagan himself referenced this
belief explicitly a half-dozen times during his presidency.
While the language of apocalyptic Christianity is absent
from George W. Bush's speeches, he has proven eager to work with
apocalyptics—a point of pride for Upton. "We're in constant contact with
the White House," he boasts. "I'm briefed at least once a week via
telephone briefings. . . . I was there about two weeks ago . . . At that time
we met with the president."
Last spring, after President Bush announced his Road Map
plan for peace in the Middle East, the Apostolic Congress co-sponsored an
effort with the Jewish group Americans for a Safe Israel that placed
billboards in 23 cities with a quotation from Genesis ("Unto thy
offspring will I give this land") and the message, "Pray that
President Bush Honors God's Covenant with Israel. Call the White House with
this message." It then provided the White House phone number and the
Apostolic Congress's Web address.
In the interview with the Voice, Pastor Upton
claimed personal responsibility for directing 50,000 postcards to the White
House opposing the Road Map, which aims to create a Palestinian state.
"I'm in total disagreement with any form of Palestinian state,"
Upton said. "Within a two-week period, getting 50,000 postcards saying
the exact same thing from places all over the country, that resonated with
the White House. That really caused [President Bush] to backpedal on the Road
Map."
When I sought to confirm Upton's account of the meeting
with the White House, I was directed to National Security Council spokesman
Frederick Jones, whose initial response upon being read a list of the names
of White House staffers present was a curt, "You know half the people
you just mentioned are Jewish?"
When asked for comment on top White House staffers meeting
with representatives of an organization that may be breaking Israeli law,
Jones responded, "Why would the White House comment on that?"
When asked whose job it is in the administration to study
the Bible to discern what parts of Israel were or weren't acceptable
sacrifices for peace, Jones said that his previous statements had been
off-the-record.
When Pastor Upton was asked to explain why the group's
website describes the Apostolic Congress as "the Christian Voice in the
nation's capital," instead of simply a Christian voice in the
nation's capital, he responded, "There has been a real lack of
leadership in having someone emerge as a Christian voice, someone who doesn't
speak for the right, someone who doesn't speak for the left, but someone who
speaks for the people, and someone who speaks from a theocratical
perspective."
When his words were repeated back to him to make sure he
had said a "theocratical" perspective, not a
"theological" perspective, he said, "Exactly. Exactly. We want
to know what God would have us say or what God would have us do in every
issue."
The Middle East was not the only issue discussed at the
March 25 meeting. James Wilkinson, deputy national security advisor for
communications, spoke first and is characterized as stating that the 9-11
Commission "is portraying those who have given their all to protect this
nation as 'weak on terrorism,' " that "99 percent of all the men
and women protecting us in this fight against terrorism are career
citizens," and offered the example of Frances Town-send, deputy national
security adviser for combating terrorism, "who sacrificed Christmas to
do a 'security video' conference."
Tim Goeglein, deputy director of public liaison and the
White House's point man with evangelical Christians, moderated, and he also
spoke on the issue of same-sex marriage. According to the memo, he asked the
rhetorical questions: "What will happen to our country if that actually
happens? What do those pushing such hope to gain?" His answer:
"They want to change America." How so? He quoted the research of
Hoover Institute senior fellow Stanley Kurtz, who holds that since gay
marriage was legalized in Scandinavia, marriage itself has virtually ceased
to exist. (In fact, since Sweden instituted a registered-partnership law for
same-sex couples in the mid '90s, there has been no overall change in the
marriage and divorce rates there.)
It is Matt Schlapp, White House political director and
Karl Rove's chief lieutenant, who was paraphrased as stating "that the
Presidents Administration and current Government is engaged in cultural,
economical, and social struggle on every level."
Also present at the meeting was Kristen Silverberg, deputy
assistant to the president for domestic policy. (None of the participants
responded to interview requests.)
The meeting was closed by Goeglein, who was asked,
"What can we do to assist in this fight for these issues and our nations
[sic] foundation and values?" and who reportedly responded, "Pray,
pray, pray, pray."
The Apostolic Congress's representative in Israel, Kim
Johnson, is ethnically Jewish, keeps kosher, and holds herself to the
sumptuary standards of Orthodox Jewish women, so as to better blend in to her
surroundings.
In one letter home obtained by the Voice she notes
that many of the Apostolic Christians she works with in Israel are Filipino
women "married to Jewish men—who on occasion accompany their wives to
meetings. We are planning to start a fellowship with this select group where
we can meet for dinners and get to know one another. Please Pray for the
timing and formation of such." Elsewhere she talks of a discussion with
someone "on the pitfalls and aggravations of Christians who missionize
Jews." She works often among the Jewish poor—the kind of people who
might be interested in interest-free loans—and is thrilled to "meet the
outcasts of this Land—how wonderful because they are in the in-casts for His
Kingdom."
An ecstatic figure who from her own reports appears to
operate at the edge of sanity ("Two of the three nights in my apartment
I have been attacked by a hair raising spirit of fear," she writes,
noting the sublet contained a Harry Potter book; "at this time I
am associating it with witchcraft"), Johnson has also met with Knesset
member Gila Gamliel. (Gamliel did not respond to interview requests.) She
also boasted of an imminent meeting with a "Knesset leader."
"At this point and for all future mails it is
important for me to note that this country has very stiff anti-missionary
laws," she warns the followers back home. [D]iscretion is required in
all mails. This is particularly important to understand when people write
mails or ask about organization efforts regarding such."
Her boss, Pastor Upton, displays a photograph on the
Apostolic Congress website of a meeting between himself and Beny Elon, Prime
Minister Sharon's tourism minister, famous in Israel for his advocacy of the
expulsion of Palestinians from Israeli-controlled lands.
His spokesman in the U.S., Ronn Torassian, affirmed that
"Minister Elon knows Mr. Upton well," but when asked whether he is
aware that Mr. Upton's staffer may be breaking Israel's anti-missionary laws,
snapped: "It's not something he's interested in discussing with The
Village Voice."
In addition to its work in Israel, the Apostolic Congress
is part of the increasingly Christian public face of pro-Israel activities in
the United States. Don Wagner, author of the book Anxious for Armageddon,
has been studying Christian Zionism for 15 years, and believes that the
current hard-line pro-Israel movement in the U.S. is "predominantly
gentile." Often, devotees work in concert with Jewish groups like
Americans for a Safe Israel, or AFSI, which set up a mostly Christian
Committee for a One-State Solution as the sponsor of last year's billboard
campaign. The committee's board included, in addition to Upton, such
evangelical luminaries as Gary Bauer and E.E. "Ed" McAteer of the
Religious Roundtable.
AFSI's executive director, Helen Freedman, confirms the
increasingly Christian cast of her coalition. "We have many good Jews,
of course," she says, "but they're in the minority." She adds,
"The liberal Jew is unable to believe the Arab when he says his goal is
to Islamize the West. . . . But I believe it. And evangelical Christians
believe it."
Of Jews who might otherwise support her group's view of
Jews' divine right to Israel, she laments, "They're embarrassed about
quoting the Bible, about referring to the Covenant, about talking about the
Promised Land."
Pastor Upton is not embarrassed, and Helen Freedman is
proud of her association with him. She is wistful when asked if she, like
Upton, has been able to finagle a meeting with the president. "Pastor
Upton is the head of a whole Apostolic Congress," she laments.
"It's a nationwide group of evangelicals."
Upton has something Freedman covets: a voting bloc.
She laughs off concerns that, for Christian Zionists,
actual Jews living in Israel serve as mere props for their end-time scenario:
"We have a different conception of what [the end of the world] will be
like . . . Whoever is right will rejoice, and whoever was wrong will say,
'Whoops!' "
She's not worried, either, about evangelical
anti-Semitism: "I don't think it exists," she says. She does say,
however, that it would concern her if she learned the Apostolic Congress had
a representative in Israel trying to win converts: "If we discovered
that people were trying to convert Jews to Christianity, we would be very
upset."
Kim Johnson doesn't call it converting Jews to
Christianity. She calls it "Circumcision of the Heart"—a spiritual
circumcision Jews must undergo because, she writes in paraphrase of Jeremiah,
chapter 9, "God will destroy all the uncircumcised nations along with
the House of Israel, because the House of Israel is uncircumcised in the
heart . . . [I]t is through the Gospel . . . that men's hearts are
circumcised."
Apostolics believe that only 144,000 Jews who have not,
prior to the Second Coming of Christ, acknowledged Jesus as the Messiah will
be saved in the end times. Though even for those who do not believe in this
literal interpretation of the Bible—or for anyone who lives in Israel, or who
cares about Israel, or whose security might be affected by a widespread
conflagration in the Middle East, which is everyone—the scriptural prophecies
of the Christian Zionists should be the least of their worries.
Instead, we should be worried about self-fulfilling
prophecies. "Biblically," stated one South Carolina minister in
support of the anti-Road Map billboard campaign, "there's always going
to be a war."
Don Wagner, an evangelical, worries that in the Republican
Party, people who believe this "are dominating the discourse now, in an
election year." He calls the attempt to yoke Scripture to current events
"a modern heresy, with cultish proportions.
"I mean, it's appalling," he rails on. "And
it also shows how marginalized mainstream Christian thinking, and the
majority of evangelical thought, have become."
It demonstrates, he says, "the absolute convergence
of the neoconservatives with the Christian Zionists and the pro-Israel lobby,
driving U.S. Mideast policy."
The problem is not that George W. Bush is discussing
policy with people who press right-wing solutions to achieve peace in the
Middle East, or with devout Christians. It is that he is discussing policy
with Christians who might not care about peace at all—at least until the
rapture.
The Jewish pro-Israel lobby, in
the interests of peace for those living in the present, might want to
consider a disengagement.
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