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Religion
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Title: The Brutal Christ of the Armageddonites; Religious fanaticism in American foreign policy
Source: AntiWar.com
URL Source: http://www.antiwar.com/utley/?articleid=8588
Published: Feb 24, 2006
Author: Jon Basil Utley
Post Date: 2006-02-24 10:47:23 by Brian S
Keywords: Armageddonites;, fanaticism, Religious
Views: 156
Comments: 14

Most Americans don't comprehend how our nation's foreign policy is affected by a small minority of religious fundamentalists. This Vanity Fair piece on the best-selling "Left Behind" novels provides a glimpse into their worldview:

"Far from being a Prince of Peace, the Christ depicted in the 'Left Behind' series is a vengeful Messiah – so vengeful that the death and destruction he causes to unconverted Jews, to secularists, to anyone who is not born again, is far, far greater than the crimes committed by the most brutal dictators in human history. When He arrives on the scene in Glorious Appearing, Christ merely has to speak and 'men and women, soldiers and horses, seemed to explode where they stood. It was as if the very words of the Lord had superheated their blood, causing it to burst through their veins and skin.' Soon, [Tim] LaHaye and [Jerry] Jenkins write, tens of thousands of foot soldiers for the Antichrist are dying in the goriest manner imaginable, their internal organs oozing out, 'their blood pooling and rising in the unforgiving brightness of the glory of Christ.'

"After the initial bloodletting, Nicolae Carpathia gathers his still-vast army, covering hundreds of square miles, and prepares for the conflict at Megiddo. As the battle for Armageddon is about to start, Rayford Steele climbs atop his Hummer to watch Christ harvest the grapes of wrath. Steele looks at the hordes of soldiers assembled by the Antichrist, and 'tens of thousands burst open at the words of Jesus.' They scream in pain and die before hitting the ground, their blood pouring forth. Soon, a massive river of blood is flowing throughout the Holy Land."

The "Left Behind" series is also very politically current, with its focus on Israel, the United Nations representing evil world government, and Iraq playing a key role for the Antichrist. In the words of Melani McAlister, these novels show vividly how "the conservative obsession with biblical prophecy is increasingly shaping our secular reality." I once tried to read one of the books and opened a page where giant grasshoppers (locusts, in Biblical terms) were stripping the flesh from live sinners, post-Rapture. I got bored and concluded that the books were horror stories for Christians who would have felt guilty reading stories about blood and gore if they were not "religious." (I did, however, see the movie Left Behind, based on the first book.)

The foundation for Armageddon beliefs is the Book of Revelation in the Bible. Revelation has a controversial history: Martin Luther doubted its canonical status and included it only as an appendix to his translation of the Bible. In addition to their focus on Revelation, American fundamentalists of the "dispensationalist" variety stress the vengeful God of the Old Testament. They believe that nearly all of humanity (including Jews who don't convert) will be "left behind" to die horrible deaths, after which Christ will establish a thousand-year reign of paradise on earth.

Arab, Egyptian, Armenian, and other Middle Eastern Christians interfere with their thesis, so the Armageddonites try to hide their existence. Pat Robertson's 700 Club, for instance, refused to show a segment about Christian Arabs. Jerry Falwell's tours of Israel purposely avoid them, according to Grace Halsell, who traveled with Falwell's group and wrote several books about the Armageddon lobby. And far from merely believing in an apocalypse at a time of God's choosing, the dispensationalists work to "hurry up God" by opposing any peace efforts in the Middle East. In March 2004, after being bombarded with letters protesting President Bush's "roadmap for peace," the White House held a special meeting with leading Christian fundamentalists to explain that removing Israeli settlements from Gaza would not interfere with God's plans for Armageddon (because Gaza has no sites of Biblical significance).

A major reason the Armageddonites have become so powerful is that most journalists can't comprehend that millions of Americans could really want, in this day and age, their God to destroy most of the human race, much less that they are donating millions to promote it (subsidizing settlements on the West Bank and paying for Russian Jews to immigrate to Israel in order to fulfill prophecies faster). Nor do most Americans know that Armageddonites are in the highest levels of government. But it was erstwhile House Majority Leader Tom DeLay who argued that the Iraq war should be supported because it is a precursor to the second coming of Christ. He also tried to undermine the Bush "roadmap for peace" when he visited Israel.

The Armageddonites have also backed brutal tactics in pursuit of their favored policies. Lt. General William G. "Jerry" Boykin is deputy undersecretary of defense for intelligence and was heavily involved in the torture scandals. Christian Zionist Sen. James Inhofe of Oklahoma was the only senator to publicly condone torture of prisoners of war. Other torture-supporting politicians were almost all from insular, religious red states with little knowledge of or concern for the outside world. Almost none of the leading fundamentalists outside of government have condemned torture (with the notable exception of Chuck Colson of Prison Fellowship).

The aforementioned Vanity Fair article explains the fundamentalists' chief motivation: vengeance.

"As befits the manifesto of a counterculture, the 'Left Behind' series is a revenge fantasy, in which right-wing Christians win out over the rational, scientific, modern, post-Enlightenment world. The books represent the apotheosis of a culture that is waging war against liberals, gays, Muslims, Arabs, the UN, and 'militant secularists' of all stripes – whom it accuses of destroying Christian America, murdering millions of unborn children, assaulting the Christian family by promoting promiscuity and homosexuality, and driving Christ out of the public square."

This is how the dispensationalist ideology, dreamed up in the mid-19th century in the poor hills of Scotland and dispersed to the backwoods of Virginia and the deserts of Texas and Oklahoma, became a major factor in American foreign policy. (For another interesting analysis of pop apocalypticism, see this piece by Gene Lyons.)

A few educated evangelicals, however, are now questioning where their brethren are trying to take America. In January, the New York Times carried a piece by Charles Marsh, a self-declared evangelical, about how many ministers agitated for war on Iraq, even telling their congregations that it would help expedite biblical prophecy. Eighty-seven percent of white evangelical Christians supported the attack, and some even linked Saddam Hussein with wicked King Nebuchadnezzar of Biblical fame. Marsh:

"Recently, I took a few days to reread the war sermons delivered by influential evangelical ministers during the lead up to the Iraq war. That period, from the fall of 2002 through the spring of 2003, is not one I will remember fondly. Many of the most respected voices in American evangelical circles blessed the president's war plans, even when doing so required them to recast Christian doctrine.

"Charles Stanley, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Atlanta, whose weekly sermons are seen by millions of television viewers, led the charge with particular fervor. 'We should offer to serve the war effort in any way possible,' said Mr. Stanley, a former president of the Southern Baptist Convention. 'God battles with people who oppose him, who fight against him and his followers.' …

"Tim LaHaye, the co-author of the hugely popular 'Left Behind' series, spoke of Iraq as 'a focal point of end-time events,' whose special role in the earth's final days will become clear after invasion, conquest, and reconstruction. For his part, Jerry Falwell boasted that 'God is pro-war' in the title of an essay he wrote in 2004."

The common theme is that America must do God's work, which is surely the sin of pride for real Christians. One of the "Left Behind" characters muses about how the few survivors in America after Christ's bloody return could "start rebuilding the country as, finally for real, a Christian nation." Their desire to violently reshape society brings us full circle back to Stalin, Pol Pot, and other secular horsemen of the apocalypse.

Marsh concludes,

"What will it take for evangelicals in the United States to recognize our mistaken loyalty? We have increasingly isolated ourselves from the shared faith of the global Church, and there is no denying that our Faustian bargain for access and power has undermined the credibility of our moral and evangelistic witness in the world. The Hebrew prophets might call us to repentance, but repentance is a tough demand for a people utterly convinced of their righteousness."

Many influential evangelicals reject the Armageddon agenda. For example, Tim Wildmon's American Family Association's magazine, in its review of a movie about the Crusades, Kingdom of Heaven, notes "the futility of Christian efforts to build the kingdom of heaven here on earth."

"Such a 'war of the cross' should strike Christians as a contradiction in terms. A literal war in the name of Jesus – a 'Christian war' – is an oxymoron, like 'hateful Christian.' Jesus said that His kingdom was not of this world, otherwise His followers would draw swords to defend Him – and presumably the kingdom itself (John 18:36)."

The large World magazine doesn't promote the "Left Behind" mentality, and non-evangelical leaders of the religious Right also disagree with dispensationalism. One of the first critics to write about the phenomenon was Gary North.

The Armageddonites, despite their self-proclaimed goodness, are a brutal, ignorant, and vengeful people. They have also become a major force dragging America to the abyss of endless war, a domestic police state (they care little for constitutional freedoms), financial ruin, and the enmity of the world.


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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 6.

#1. To: Brian S, *Bereans* (#0)

Below is the article linked above as "a piece by Charles Marsh" I encourage all to read it.

(more thoughts later on the "Armageddonites").

------

New York Times



January 20, 2006
Op-Ed Contributor
Wayward Christian Soldiers
By CHARLES MARSH

Charlottesville, Va.

IN the past several years, American evangelicals, and I am one of them, have amassed greater political power than at any time in our history. But at what cost to our witness and the integrity of our message?

Recently, I took a few days to reread the war sermons delivered by influential evangelical ministers during the lead up to the Iraq war. That period, from the fall of 2002 through the spring of 2003, is not one I will remember fondly. Many of the most respected voices in American evangelical circles blessed the president's war plans, even when doing so required them to recast Christian doctrine.

Charles Stanley, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Atlanta, whose weekly sermons are seen by millions of television viewers, led the charge with particular fervor. "We should offer to serve the war effort in any way possible," said Mr. Stanley, a former president of the Southern Baptist Convention. "God battles with people who oppose him, who fight against him and his followers." In an article carried by the convention's Baptist Press news service, a missionary wrote that "American foreign policy and military might have opened an opportunity for the Gospel in the land of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob."

As if working from a slate of evangelical talking points, both Franklin Graham, the evangelist and son of Billy Graham, and Marvin Olasky, the editor of the conservative World magazine and a former advisor to President Bush on faith-based policy, echoed these sentiments, claiming that the American invasion of Iraq would create exciting new prospects for proselytizing Muslims. Tim LaHaye, the co-author of the hugely popular "Left Behind" series, spoke of Iraq as "a focal point of end-time events," whose special role in the earth's final days will become clear after invasion, conquest and reconstruction. For his part, Jerry Falwell boasted that "God is pro-war" in the title of an essay he wrote in 2004.

The war sermons rallied the evangelical congregations behind the invasion of Iraq. An astonishing 87 percent of all white evangelical Christians in the United States supported the president's decision in April 2003. Recent polls indicate that 68 percent of white evangelicals continue to support the war. But what surprised me, looking at these sermons nearly three years later, was how little attention they paid to actual Christian moral doctrine. Some tried to square the American invasion with Christian "just war" theory, but such efforts could never quite reckon with the criterion that force must only be used as a last resort. As a result, many ministers dismissed the theory as no longer relevant.

Some preachers tried to link Saddam Hussein with wicked King Nebuchadnezzar of Biblical fame, but these arguments depended on esoteric interpretations of the Old Testament book of II Kings and could not easily be reduced to the kinds of catchy phrases that are projected onto video screens in vast evangelical churches. The single common theme among the war sermons appeared to be this: our president is a real brother in Christ, and because he has discerned that God's will is for our nation to be at war against Iraq, we shall gloriously comply.

Such sentiments are a far cry from those expressed in the Lausanne Covenant of 1974. More than 2,300 evangelical leaders from 150 countries signed that statement, the most significant milestone in the movement's history. Convened by Billy Graham and led by John Stott, the revered Anglican evangelical priest and writer, the signatories affirmed the global character of the church of Jesus Christ and the belief that "the church is the community of God's people rather than an institution, and must not be identified with any particular culture, social or political system, or human ideology."

On this page, David Brooks correctly noted that if evangelicals elected a pope, it would most likely be Mr. Stott, who is the author of more than 40 books on evangelical theology and Christian devotion. Unlike the Pope John Paul II, who said that invading Iraq would violate Catholic moral teaching and threaten "the fate of humanity," or even Pope Benedict XVI, who has said there were "not sufficient reasons to unleash a war against Iraq," Mr. Stott did not speak publicly on the war. But in a recent interview, he shared with me his abiding concerns.

"Privately, in the days preceding the invasion, I had hoped that no action would be taken without United Nations authorization," he told me. "I believed then and now that the American and British governments erred in proceeding without United Nations approval." Reverend Stott referred me to "War and Rumors of War, " a chapter from his 1999 book, "New Issues Facing Christians Today," as the best account of his position. In that essay he wrote that the Christian community's primary mission must be "to hunger for righteousness, to pursue peace, to forbear revenge, to love enemies, in other words, to be marked by the cross."

What will it take for evangelicals in the United States to recognize our mistaken loyalty? We have increasingly isolated ourselves from the shared faith of the global Church, and there is no denying that our Faustian bargain for access and power has undermined the credibility of our moral and evangelistic witness in the world. The Hebrew prophets might call us to repentance, but repentance is a tough demand for a people utterly convinced of their righteousness.

Charles Marsh, a professor of religion at the University of Virginia, is the author of "The Beloved Community: How Faith Shapes Social Justice, from the Civil Rights Movement to Today."

Starwind  posted on  2006-02-24   12:20:54 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: All (#1)

Here is another insightful piece cited by Utley as "review of a movie about the Crusades, Kingdom of Heaven, notes".

I encourage all to read it (seems perhaps a good movie as well).

-----


By ED VITAGLIANO | AFA Journal News Editor

The Crusades. Muslims almost universally see those hundreds of years of warfare with the West as nothing more than Christian religious fanaticism and Christendom57;s economic imperialism.

Ironically, that is also a view shared by many in the West, based on a simplistic understanding of history and rooted in much of Western academia57;s obligatory and feverish sense of self-hatred.

Although in modern usage the word "Crusades" can have a variety of meanings 52; and even refer to non-religious endeavors 52; it derives from the Latin word for "cross." Originally, then, the word represented these various Christian military campaigns as "wars of the cross."

The First Crusade was ignited in 1095 by the preaching of Pope Urban II, who stirred to war the Catholic kingdoms in Western Europe against the Muslim world. By that time, much of what had been Christian lands in Spain, North Africa, the Middle East, and Asia Minor (modern Turkey) had been conquered by Muslims. The Eastern Orthodox half of Christianity, centered in Constantinople, was also threatened with total subjugation.

It was the obligation of all Christians, said Pope Urban II, to rescue their Christian brethren in the East and to wrest control of the Holy Land out of the hands of Muslim infidels (unbelievers ).

A kingdom on earth
How far can Christians go in using earthly means to extend the kingdom of God? How should believers treat their enemies? Can there be peace on earth without Christ?

A new movie about the Crusades explores some of these themes. Kingdom of Heaven, the latest film from popular director Ridley Scott, is less emotionally gripping than his Academy Award-winning Gladiator, but it is simultaneously more thought-provoking.

Kingdom of Heaven is loosely based on actual events that took place in the year 1187, between the Second and Third Crusades. The city of Jerusalem, recaptured by Christian armies in the First Crusade, fell to the great Saracen leader Saladin.

AFA neither condones nor recommends the movie57;s realistic presentation of 12th-century combat or the film57;s brief sex scene between two of the main characters. Other Christian reviews recommend the movie, saying it will challenge Christians to understand the postmodern mindset about religion and spirituality, as well as understand the temptation to earthly power.

It is this latter issue which stands out so profoundly in the film, which focuses on the events leading up to Saladin57;s conquest of Jerusalem. Prior to the city57;s fall, Kingdom of Heaven presents Jerusalem57;s King Baldwin IV as maintaining a fragile peace among the faithful of the world57;s three major monotheistic religions 52; Christianity, Islam and Judaism. That peace, the movie makes clear, was possible only through Baldwin57;s enlightened tolerance and the benevolence of Saladin.

The production notes given to the press for Kingdom of Heaven state that that harmonious coexistence is Baldwin57;s "vision of peace," his belief that "a kingdom of heaven can flourish on earth."

And that vision is shared by a handful of knights, including the main character, Balian of Ibelin, played by popular actor Orlando Bloom. These knights "swear to uphold [the vision of peace] with their lives and honor."

But Baldwin, dying of leprosy, understands that there are forces within Jerusalem57;s walls 52; led by a malevolent knight named Guy de Lusignan 52; that want war with Saladin. These men believe, as Guy says, that no army that bears the cross of Jesus Christ can be beaten in battle with Muslim infidels.

In preliminary clashes with Muslims, it is startling to see images in the film in which Christians are riding into battle with the cross on their tunics and shields, unabashedly killing in the name of Jesus.

They do so because they firmly believe that they are doing God57;s will. In one scene, when Baldwin is forced by political intrigue to go to battle with Saladin, knights are heard shouting, "God wills it!" This echoes the words which answered the fervent preaching of Pope Urban II, when he began the First Crusade with the same charge.

After Baldwin57;s death, Guy, newly-crowned king of Jerusalem, leads the Christian army out of the city into the desert in pursuit of Saladin, and soon the viewer sees them parched and weary in the barren wastes. The army is annihilated, and Guy is captured and humiliated.

Guy57;s pride, arrogance and hatred of Muslims have driven him to a tragic decision. Not only has the main body of the army of Jerusalem been destroyed, but now Saladin, pushed by warmongers in his own camp, decides to assault the city.

The entire sequence is a potent symbol of the futility of Christian efforts to build the kingdom of heaven here on earth. The Crusades were basically a failure militarily and politically, even though they had profound economic ramifications for the development of Western Europe. But it was the religious failure that was most apparent.

Such a "war of the cross" should strike Christians as a contradiction in terms. A literal war in the name of Jesus 52; a "Christian war" 52; is an oxymoron, like "hateful Christian." Jesus said that His kingdom was not of this world, otherwise His followers would draw swords to defend Him 52; and presumably the kingdom itself (John 18:36).

In Scripture, the Christian is certainly called to war, but it is a spiritual war, fought primarily with spiritual weapons. Believers honor Christ, not by hating their enemies, but by loving them.

A kingdom of fallen men
Ironically, while the Crusades may have been an example of Christians trying to build the kingdom of heaven on earth, Kingdom of Heaven clearly recommends its own version of utopia. In a sense, the creators of this film also fail to learn from the Crusaders57; mistakes.

In interviews with the press, it is clear that Scott and the other principals involved in Kingdom of Heaven believe they have a message for Christians and anyone else who will listen.

Bloom told a press gathering that Jerusalem under Baldwin57;s reign was a symbol for what can happen if people will simply learn to coexist peacefully. "The kingdom of heaven is not what you might expect," he says. "It57;s not in some afterlife. It57;s a place where you can be who you were born to be, where you can be true to yourself. It57;s a kingdom of conscience. It57;s a kingdom of hope and unity. It57;s an ideal of a world we all should strive for, a world of peace."

This utopia, however, was brought to ruin in Kingdom of Heaven by the worst flaws of men. William Monahan, who wrote the screenplay, says Jerusalem at the time was only brought down by human "greed, ambition, [and] fanaticism."

If only we could learn from this tragedy, Scott says. "Unfortunately, we don57;t seem to learn from history, do we? That57;s one of the lessons in the story. That, here we go again, and we don57;t seem to actually learn anything from history. You57;d think that we would," he complains.

But if Scott doesn57;t think mankind has learned any lessons from history, what makes him think they will learn anything from a movie?

The truth is that they won57;t, because human nature is irretrievably fallen. There is a corrosive sinfulness in the human heart, as well as a blindness that keeps the heart from seeing this flaw 52; a flaw that will forever be fatal to all utopian endeavors.

In fact, this truth about human nature is even laid out in Kingdom of Heaven. Everywhere the viewer looks in the film, he can see sin infecting the characters like a nasty virus: Balian discovers he was conceived because his father, a knight, had raped his mother; Balian murders a priest who57;d stolen a necklace off the body of Balian57;s deceased wife; greed and a lust for power drive the political intrigues within Jerusalem; knights butcher Muslim caravans; a bishop advises that Christians convert to Islam to save their own lives.

Midway through Kingdom of Heaven, Balian has an adulterous affair with Guy57;s wife, the princess Sibylla, played by actress Eva Green. She says of her character: "She hates her husband; she doesn57;t respect his values or his pursuit of power. Sibylla and Balian are helplessly drawn to one another, despite political complications."

"Helplessly" drawn to adultery? Such a statement is a pitiful excuse for sin 52; and a chilling explanation of its power.

This is precisely the point missed by Kingdom of Heaven. These flaws within the human heart cannot be conquered. The fault lies not in the capacity of men to conceive of utopian societies 52; just in their ability to create and sustain them. As C.S. Lewis says in Mere Christianity, something always seems to destroy the drive for the consummate culture.

"Terrific energy is expended 52; civilizations are built up 52; excellent institutions devised; but each time something goes wrong. Some fatal flaw always brings the selfish and cruel people to the top, and it all slides back into misery and ruin," Lewis says.

A true kingdom of heaven
This is not to suggest that Christians who have a Biblical view of man57;s fallen nature should cling to pessimism and, in the resulting passivity, refuse to work for peace, justice and freedom. On the contrary, Christians above all should strive to create a society with such attributes.

But Christians must take their stand on Scripture at all times and warn errant humanity that apart from the grace of God that is poured out through Christ, none of these attributes can last for long. Yes, God can bless a nation with freedom, but it is like the blessing of the earth57;s fruitfulness. A peach, to be enjoyed, must be plucked from the tree. But it will not last long, cut off from the branch. It will shrivel and rot, spoiled by the power of a universe under the curse of corruption.

There is only one way for human nature to be conquered, and that is through the salvation and Lordship of Jesus Christ. Yes, men long for a blessed kingdom, but God in His wisdom has kept it in heaven, that men may know that utopia exists only in the shadow of His presence.

Starwind  posted on  2006-02-24   17:35:08 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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