John Hagee: deviant theology, dangerous foreign policy
By John Taylor
Online Journal Contributing Writer
May 7, 2008, 00:21
Pastor John Hagee gleefully anticipates the death of
hundreds of millions of people in a series of wars preparing the world for the
second coming of Christ: �The end of the world is rapidly approaching . . . Rejoice
and be exceeding glad.�
Worse, Hagee wants to jump start what he sees as the
inevitable battle between Israel and the US and an alliance of the Islamic
states and Russia: �The United States must join Israel in a preemptive military
strike against Iran to fulfill God�s plan for both Israel and the West.�
Hagee�s bizarre interpretation of the Bible sees war with Iran as a �biblically
prophesized End Time confrontation . . . which will lead to the Rapture,
Tribulation and the Second Coming.�
If Hagee were just another kook, walking around Times Square
carrying a sign saying �The End is Near,� there would be no need to worry. In
fact, Hagee is senior pastor of the Cornerstone Church in San Antonio, Texas,
with a congregation of 18,000, appears weekly on 150 TV stations around the
world and is the head of Christians United For Israel (CUFI), a lobbying group
founded to advance the interests of the State of Israel in the U.S. Congress. Not
only does Hagee advocate aggressive war against Iran, he is a strong supporter
of our continuing misadventure in Iraq and he opposes any Israeli withdrawal
from the West Bank, arguing that God has given all of Palestine to the
Israelis.
John Hagee�s end time theology transmogrifies Christianity
into little more than a death cult in which the State of Israel is worshipped
like a latter day Golden Calf. Despite his weird views, Hagee has access to
senior politicians in the US and Israel; he likes to brag that he has met every
Israeli prime minister since Menachem Begin.
President Bush praised Hagee�s CUFI for �spreading the hope
of God�s love and the universal gift of freedom.� How to square �spreading . .
. God�s love� and the �gift of freedom� with bombing the Iranians is hard to
fathom, but, in any event, evangelicals like Hagee have been among President
Bush�s strongest supporters and the president is not about to abandon them now.
Senator Joe Lieberman is also a Hagee fan and praised him at
last year�s CUFI meeting in Washington, likening him to Moses, �a man of God . .
. leading a mighty multitude.� If comparing Hagee to Moses seems over the top,
remember Hagee and Lieberman have a lot in common. Both men were keen to see
the US invade Iraq and both would like to have Uncle Sam attack Syria and Iran,
a wish shared by many in Washington, especially arms makers, the American
Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and neocons in the White House and the
Pentagon.
John McCain recently thanked Pastor Hagee for endorsing his
run for the presidency. Eight years ago, McCain made a point of denouncing
Hagee�s fellow evangelical Jerry Falwell as an �agent of intolerance� and an
�evil influence on the Republican party.� Clearly times have changed.
Hagee�s distorted view of Christianity, his hatred of Islam
(Hagee once said "those who live by the Koran have a scriptural mandate to
kill Christians and Jews�) and his toxic criticism of American Middle East
policy have all become part of American political discourse. For example,
Senator Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma believes �We are Israel�s best friend . . . because
of the character we have as a nation . . . This is not a political battle at
all. It is a contest over whether or not the word of God is true.� Former House
Majority Leader Dick Armey opined, �I am content to have Israel grab the entire
West Bank . . . I happen to believe the Palestinians should leave.� And just a
few months ago, presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, an ex-evangelical
preacher himself, said he favored the establishment of a Palestinian state, but
not in Palestine, rather in Egypt or Saudi Arabia.
Many people, some influential, some not, think religious
belief should guide American Middle East policy. Others would say that that the
Bible and foreign policy ought to remain entirely separate and that a
discussion of Hagee�s religious doctrine is about as meaningful as trying to
decide how many angels can fit on the head of a pin. What individuals on both
sides of this debate don�t realize is that Hagee�s highly selective reading and
strange interpretation of the Bible put him well outside mainstream Christian
belief.
Hagee regards God�s covenant with Abraham in the book of
Genesis as granting the Patriarch and his descendents unconditional title to
the Holy Land. He concludes, therefore, that no territorial compromise with the
Palestinians is desirable or necessary. Hagee preaches that those who bless
Israel will themselves be blessed (Genesis 12:3) and that a close military and
political alliance between the United States and Israel is mandated in
scripture. Further, Hagee sees the 1948 emergence of an independent Israel as a
sign of the second coming of Christ. Finally, and most controversial of all for
an evangelical preacher, Hagee claims that God�s covenant with the ancient
Hebrews allows Jews to be saved without belief in Christ.
Did God grant Abraham and his offspring unconditional and
eternal possession of the Holy Land? Many scholars would argue that remaining
in the land required the Israelites to keep God�s laws. Failure to do so would
bring divine punishment. Moses warned in Deuteronomy 28, �If you are not
careful to do all the words of this law . . . you shall be plucked off the land
that you are entering to take possession of.� The Hebrews� captivity in Babylon
and the Roman conquest of Jerusalem in 70 AD demonstrate to many scholars that
God�s covenant with Abraham and his descendents was conditional and their right
to the Holy Land by no means absolute.
When Hagee advocates unqualified American support for the
State of Israel as a means of obtaining the Almighty�s blessing, he assumes the
modern State of Israel is a linear and worthy successor to Abraham. Does
blessing Israel mean giving the government of the State of Israel unconditional
political, financial and military support? One could argue that Israel�s
efforts to colonize the lands captured in 1967 and to dispossess the
Palestinians violate the Old Testament commandments against theft and killing.
Furthermore, Hagee�s callous disregard for the suffering of indigenous
Christians and Muslims is certainly contrary to the New Testament injunctions
to �love thy neighbor as thy self� (Matt. 19:19) and to �do unto others as you
would have others do unto you� (Matt. 7:12), to say nothing of �Blessed are the
peacemakers for they shall be called the sons of God� (Matt. 5:9). Hagee�s
bizarre theology has hijacked the messages of the Old and New Testaments to
sanctify the injustices done in the Holy Land.
The second coming of Christ is a difficult issue because the
Bible can be interpreted in many ways. In his book, Jerusalem Countdown, Hagee enumerates 10 �signs� which he claims
�prove� that Christ�s return to earth is imminent. But Luke�s gospel (17: 20)
gives a diametrically opposing view: �The Kingdom of God is not coming with
signs to be observed.� Furthermore, Pastor Hagee may say he knows when Christ
is returning but his confidence is inconsistent with the parable of the
bridegroom (Matt. 25): �you know neither the day nor the hour wherein the Son
of man cometh.�
Most people who have studied the Christian religion,
believers or not, would assert that the New Testament requires belief in Christ
for salvation: that is, after all, what makes Christians Christians and the New
Testament new. Hagee�s interpretation of scripture posits that salvation for
Jews is also possible in Christianity because of God�s covenant with Abraham.
Pastor Hagee�s view is obviously erroneous: the gospel of John states, �I
(Christ) am the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except
through Me.� (John 14:6)
It is easy to understand why Hagee preaches what he does. If
you make the State of Israel an object of veneration and at the same time
insist that its inhabitants convert to Christianity, you are not going to make
many friends in Israel or among Israel�s supporters in the US. And for similar
reasons Hagee asserts the Bible favors the Israelis over the Palestinians:
Pastor Hagee obviously enjoys meeting Israeli Prime Minister Olmert, speaking in
front of the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee and having Malcolm
Hoenlein, the head of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish
Organizations, visit him in San Antonio. Hagee bartered his faith for power and
fame, money and notoriety. An advocate of unjust war, Hagee has put down the
Bible and taken up the sword. His kingdom is very much of this world.
The Founding Fathers were wise to forbid in the Constitution
the establishment of a religion in the US. Although morality, often finding its
roots in religion, will always influence government and election of public
officials, the specifics of religious belief and practice have been kept, for
the most part, in private life, to the nation�s great benefit. Making decisions
about war and peace based on strange interpretations of arcane End Time
prophecy is dangerous and absurd. That Hagee is a serious political player in
21st Century America shows we have truly entered a post Enlightenment era.
John
Taylor, a lifelong Republican, received an AB in Near Eastern Languages from
The University of Chicago. He is a US Army veteran. As a young man he served in
the Middle East as a civil servant, archaeologist and banker. Prior to
retirement he worked in the energy business in Texas for 20 years.
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