American Christian Fundamentalist Leader Calls For Global War
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article11065.htm
By Yoginder Sikand
"Israel Cause Is OUR Cause”
“We Stand With Israel"
Because It Is a Beacon of HEGEMONY in the Region; That is Why We Stand With Israel
Because Its Very Existence is a Defiant Affront to MUSLIMS; That Is Why We Stand With Israel
Because In Defeating ISLAM Because Israel's Cause is OUR Cause. And That is Why We Stand With Israel
Because of Our Shared Values & Our Shared Belief in the OCCUPATION OF MUSLIM LANDS TO PILLAGE THEIR RESOURCES & the Right to IMPLEMENT That Without Fear or Oppression. And What We Must Do Is to Think Rationally & Strategically About How Our Values, Our Beliefs Can Be Translated Into Effective Action. It is Not Enough for Us to Say the Right Things; We've Got To Be Smart & Tough Enough to Do the Right Things That Will KILL THOUSANDS OF MUSLIMS & DESTROY ISLAM Now & Forever.” –
The US American Christian
Fundamentalist Leader Calls For Global War
11/18/05 "Countercurrents"
-- -- If Christian fundamentalists are to be believed, America's invasion of
Iraq and the consequent brutal slaughter of thousands of innocent civilians in
that country are all part of a grand divine plan that will finally culminate in
the 'second coming' of Jesus Christ. Establishing an empire that will extend all
over the globe, Christ will rule like a powerful monarch, saving those who
believe in him and dispatching non-believers, all non-Christians and non-conformist
Christians, to everlasting perdition in hell. This is no childish nonsense for
millions of Christian fundamentalists, who sincerely believe this to be
predicted in the Bible. Not surprisingly, American Christian fundamentalists are
today among the most fanatic supporters of Bush's global imperialist wars, in
Iraq and elsewhere, which they see as in keeping with the divine mandate. They
are no eccentric or lunatic fringe elements, for today Christian fundamentalists
exercise a powerful influence in American politics. Among them is George Bush
himself, who insists that the American invasion of Iraq has been sanctioned by
God, with whom he claims to be in personal communication.
While the Western press is awash with stories, real and exaggerated, about 'Islamic
fundamentalists', rarely is mention made about Christian fundamentalists, who,
with their vast resources and close links with the current American
administration, are a potentially more menacing threat than their Muslim
counterparts. According to newspaper reports more than a third of Americans are
associated with one or the other Christian fundamentalist outfit, most of which
are fiercely anti-communist, anti-Muslim and are passionate advocates of free-market
capitalism, global American hegemony and the myth of the civilizing mission of
white America. In recent years, these fundamentalist groups have been engaged in
aggressive missionary work in other countries as well, including in the so-called
'Third World'. Fired by a passionate hatred for other religions, which they
dismiss as 'false' and even 'Satanic', they are today among the most well-funded
missionary groups in large parts of Asia and Africa. Crusading for Christ, these
fundamentalist groups are not simply out fishing for souls. Rather, for them
Christianity is only part of the agenda, which also includes aggressively
promoting American and Zionist interests. Today, these groups preach not only
Christ but also Pax Americana and even American-led imperialist wars, which they
bless as holy causes to usher in the final arrival of Jesus.
Texas-based author and preacher Michael Evans is one of the most notorious
American Christian fundamentalist preachers today, a passionate advocate of war
in the name of Christ. In a recently published book, titled 'Beyond Iraq: The
Next Move-Ancient Prophecy and Modern-Day Conspiracy Collide' (Whitestone Books,
Florida, 2003), he spells out a grand design for American global hegemony,
blessed in the guise of a holy global war. Key players in this 'divine' plot
include the CIA, the American government and army, and Israel, besides various
Christian fundamentalist outfits. The book is dedicated, among others, to what
Evans describes as 'two old friends', Ehud Olmert, former Israeli Vice President,
and the former Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. Equally revealingly,
the book begins with a quotation which graces the lobby of the original
headquarters of the CIA.
Evans is no petty crank who claims to be God-possessed, although his writings
might seem to suggest that. The jacket of the book describes him as a 'TIME
magazine best-selling author', who has appeared on the BBC and on American
television channels and who has written for such papers as the Wall Street
Journal and the Jerusalem Post. He hobnobs with the highest of American and
Israeli politicians and religious leaders, and is evidently taken very seriously
in Christian fundamentalist circles. That Evans is also a passionate Bush-backer
is amply evident in his clam that, 'I know, from a first hand, personal
interview with him that Bush is a man of faith who believes in the Bible'.
Evans is the founder of the 'Jerusalem Prayer Team', which, he says, he
established after having been visited by God in a vision. Among those who
participated in the inauguration of his outfit were such names as Franklin
Graham, Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell, all notorious American Christian
fundamentalist leaders, Governor Dick Perry and Representative Dick Armey, and
Benjamin Netanyahu, former Israeli Prime Minister. Thousands of others in
America and elsewhere, so he claims, have joined his movement in the aftermath
of 11 September, 2001. His ultimate aim, he writes, is to have one million 'intercessors
praying daily for the peace of Jesus and God's protection for Israel' so that 'demonic
powers will be defeated by holy angels in a battle that cannot be seen with the
natural eye'.
A fierce Christian Zionist, Evans has close links with the Israeli establishment.
The book's jacket states that he received the 'Ambassador Award' from the
government of Israel and relates that he has been 'a confidante to most of
Israel's prime ministers and to both of Jerusalem's mayors'. The jacket quotes
Benjamin Netanyahu as praising Evans for having 'consistently demonstrated the
moral clarity that is necessary to defend Israel from the lies and distortions
of its enemies'. This is no empty boast: the book contains pictures of Evans
with Menachem Begin endorsing his first book, 'Israel: America's Key To Survival',
praying with Shimon Peres, comforting Jewish victims of a bomb blast in Israel,
launching the 'Jerusalem Prayer Team' along with Jerusalem's mayor, pledging
support to Israel before Yitzhak Shamir along with half a million signatures of
fellow Christians, championing Israel's cause at the royal palace in Madrid and
keeping company with American soldiers in Lebanon and Somalia. *
Christianity, War and the 'Defense' of Israel
For Evans, and numerous other rabid Christian fundamentalist preachers of hate
like him, one of the most crucial purposes of America's invasion of Iraq is the
'defense' of Israel, which he regards as a solemn Christian duty. If till
recently Jews were routinely reviled by the Church as 'Christ-killers', and,
accordingly, hounded by Christian authorities, many of today's Christian
fundamentalists, like Evans, are passionate advocates of the state of Israel.
This does not, however, represent any shift in their fervent belief, intrinsic
to mainstream Christianity, that non-Christians, Jews included, are destined for
Hell. Rather, it is part of a wider conversion agenda. Jesus, they believe, will
return to the world to rule only once the Jews have 'returned' to Palestine and
have rebuilt the temple of David that was destroyed almost two thousand years
ago. After this momentous event, many Jews will convert to Christianity and
those who refuse to will be sent to hell. Till then, Christian fundamentalists
argue, the Jews and their state must be passionately defended from their 'enemies',
who are invariably identified as Arabs and Muslims.
The 'defence' of Israel, a central point in the Christian fundamentalist agenda,
is typically argued in racist terms. Israel, Christian fundamentalists believe,
are God's 'chosen people', and they quote the Bible as making this claim,
suggesting, therefore, that non-Jewish peoples are somehow lesser beings. Evans,
too, makes this point and argues that according to the Bible 'God will bless
those who bless Israel' and will 'curse those who curse it'. 'History records',
he says, 'that God deals with nations in accordance with how those nations deal
with Israel'. Hence, in the 'defence' of Israel, Christians, Evans argues, have
no choice. If they are true to their faith, he says, they must join hands with
America in its war for 'defending' Israel, and must 'support Israel in every
possible way'. 'We must either choose Mount Zion [Jerusalem] and be among those
who obey the voice of the Spirit of the Lord', he writes, 'or we will be left to
the passions of our flesh, drinking the wine of her [Bablyon's or Iraq's]
fornication'.
The invasion of Iraq, and the broader American 'war on terror', is, Evans says,
is akin to 'divine light [.] proclaiming like a trumpet a spiritual battle of
monumental proportions', pitting Babylon, the Biblical Iraq, the 'spiritual
centre of darkness', against Jerusalem or contemporary Israel, the 'spiritual
centre of light'. But so that this 'divine light' should spread beyond the
confines of Babylon, Evans pleads for America to extend its war all over the
globe, to every country that dares to challenge American supremacy and the state
of Israel. This war, he says, should aim at the elimination of all 'terrorists',
defined as those who refuse to support Israeli and American interests. In this,
the invasion and occupation of Iraq is of vital importance, Evans says, because
it will 'become a US base' to destroy 'terrorist' networks elsewhere in the
Middle East and eventually to usher in what he calls 'the apocalyptic battle' of
Armageddon, 'the final battles of the ages' as allegedly 'prophesied in Daniel,
Jeremiah and Revelations', chapters of the Bible.
America, as Evans sees it, must be ready to sacrifice itself to protect Israel,
because that, he says, is precisely what the Christian God wants. Hence,
Palestinians resisting the illegal occupation of their land and all those who
opposed to Israel and its imperialist and expansionist policies must be crushed
with the might of American arms, he insists. The Christian God does not brook
any peace with such people, he argues. The Bible, he announces, says that those
who fight against Israel, God's supposedly chosen people and recipients of His 'special
blessing', would be destroyed by God Himself. He quotes the Bible as declaring:
'And this shall be the plague with which the Lord will strike all the people who
fought against Jerusalem: Their flesh shall dissolve while they stand on their
feet. Their eyes shall dissolve in their sockets. And their tongues shall
dissolve in their mouths'.
Given this supposed divine backing, Evans exhorts America to invade and
subjugate all countries opposed to Israel, specifically naming Lebanon, Syria
and Iran. The ultimate agenda, he says, is to destroy these countries and
establish what Zionists call Eretz or Greater Israel, extending to and including
Iraq. This is because, Evans quotes the Bible as saying, God allegedly gave this
vast stretch of land, from the Nile to the Euphrates, to Abraham and his son
Isaac and his descendants, ancestors of the Jews, as a covenant and as their 'everlasting
possession'. Echoing hardliner Zionists, Evans insists that there can be no
peace with the Palestinians at any cost, because, he claims, the Christian God
is opposed to this. If Israel and America are to faithfully abide by the
Christian God's will, he says, they must not let anything get in the way of the
establishment of Eretz Israel. Thus, various peace proposals that involve any
territorial concessions on the part of Israel are ruled out. This is because, as
Evans alleges, God has given the entire territory to the Jews till eternity.
Christianity and the New Anti-Muslim Crusade
As for the Arabs and Muslims more generally, Evans seems to suggest that the
Christian God desires that they be humiliated, subjugated and crushed. Thus, he
quotes the Bible as saying that while God specially blessed Isaac and his
descendants, the Jews, he had a different plan in mind for the Arabs,
descendants of Ishmael, Abraham's other son. Referring to Ishmael Evans quotes
the Bible as saying, 'He will be a wild man; His hand shall be against every man
and every man's hand against him'. This racist stereotype, so deeply rooted in
traditional Christian discourse about Muslims, is held by Evans to be what he
calls 'a fitting description of the Arab terrorist' and, presumably, as
justifying the annihilation of the Arab people, as well as other Muslims. Evans
goes so far in vilifying Arabs and Muslims as to call Muhammad a proto-terrorist,
alleging that he had banished and killed Jews for not believing in him. 'Terrorism',
he claims, is a logical consequence of Islam, and he argues that 'Muhammad set a
sordid example for his present-day disciples, the Qadafis, Khomeinis, Arafats
and bin Ladens and Husseins of this world'. Claiming knowledge of the unseen, he
even announces that Islam is 'a malevolent manifestation of a religion conceived
in the pit of hell'.
Evans thus equates Islam with the forces of the 'Anti-Christ', against whom he
appeals to Christians to marshal all the resources at their command. Ironically,
while spewing hatred and calling for a global war, he presents Christianity as
peace-loving, contrasting it with Islam, which he equates with 'terrorism'. 'Christianity
differs from Islam as day differs from night', he claims, completely unmindful
of the sordid and blood-soaked history of the faith he claims to champion. In
the same breath as he issues a general summons to Christians to wage war in the
name of their faith he refers to the Bible as instructing Christians to 'turn
the other cheek' when slapped, in order to argue that, unlike Christianity,
Islam is an inherently vile religion, equating it with what he terms 'the law of
the bullet, militancy, treachery, terrorism and violence'.
Christianity, America and Oil
Christian fundamentalists are ardent advocates of free-market capitalism, having
played a key role in America's war against communism during the Cold War. Christ,
capitalism and American supremacy go together, Evans believes, and so, while
announcing that an American-spearheaded global war is precisely what Christ
mandates, he approvingly quotes Isser Harel, founder of the Israeli secret
services' organization Mossad, who speaks of the 'terror' threat to America's 'freedom',
'capitalism' and 'power', and exhorts America to take appropriate defence
measures. Evans goes so far as to advise the America to capture all the oil
wealth in Arab lands in order to prevent 'terrorists' from using oil wealth to
target Israel, home to God's supposedly 'special people'. A more ingenuous
excuse to justify American greed could hardly be devised!
Since Muslims, especially the Arabs, are branded virtually as agents of the
Devil, Evans argues that America, as self-appointed agent of Christ, should have
no qualms about invading oil-rich Arab lands. This would, he says, break
America's dependence on Muslim countries for oil which. If America seizes all
Arab oil-fields, it would, he says, sharply reduce oil prices, forcing Muslim
countries 'to their knees', giving them only two options: 'cooperate with the
war on terror or go bankrupt'. At the same time as he exhorts America to invade
and occupy all the countries, no matter what the human cost, Evans warns that it
should not be serious about its rhetoric of exporting 'democracy' to the Middle
East, for, he argues, it would lead to anti-American and anti-Israeli Islamists
taking over.
*
Invasion of Iraq and the Ushering in of Global Christendom
and Pax-Americana
Evans sees America's invasion and occupation of Iraq as the unfolding of a
divine plan for the world. It is not nothing less than what he calls a grand 'spiritual
battle', between Christianity and Satanic forces and 'demons', as represented by
Muslims and other non-Christians. Accordingly, he fervently welcomes America's
invasion of Iraq and pleads that America should expand the theatre of war by
invading various other, mostly Muslim, countries.
The murder and destruction that America has wrought in Iraq is nothing to grieve
about, Evans seems to suggest. It is a price, he argues, that God is supposedly
exacting from Muslims for having been 'coerced' by Satan to 'loathe' the Jews, 'God's
Chosen People'. It is also a divine punishment, he says, for Iraq having
allegedly possessing 'deadly chemical, biological or nuclear weapons', echoing
the bogus claim made by Bush, Blair and their henchmen which they used to
justify their invasion of that country. Weak-hearted Christians who might
disagree are advised to all in line, for, Evans says, this is precisely what the
Bible predicts and what God mandates. 'I will raise against Babylon an assembly
of great nations from the north country, for she has sinned against God', the
Jewish prophet Jeremiah is said to have announced, and Evans takes this as
evidence of his claim that the American invasion of Iraq is demanded by God and
that all America is doing is to faithfully follow God's will.
Iraq, the Biblical Babylon, Evans insists, represents the forces of Satan, and
hence deserves to be crushed by America, God's agent, through invasion and war.
'Babylon is fallen, that great city, because she has made all nations drink of
the wine of the wrath of her fornication', he quotes the Bible as saying. 'I
will rise up against them [.] I will cut off from Babylon her name and survivors,
her offspring and descendants [.] I will turn her into a place for owls and into
swampland. I will sweep her with the broom of destruction', Evans quotes the
Biblical God as having declared. He marshals other Biblical verses to press the
argument about Iraq being allegedly inherently 'evil' and hence deserving harsh
repression at American hands. Eve and Adam are said to have committed the 'first
sin' there; it was in Iraq that occult and astrology were invented;
Nebuchadnezzar, ruler of Babylon, conquered Israel and enslaved the Jews; the
Babylonians built the Tower of Babel, thereby defying God by trying to reach
heaven without His permission; and the Bible describes Babylon as the 'seat' of
the Anti-Christ and the 'Beast', the 'seat of Satan's evil', in contrast to
Jerusalem, the 'seat of God's righteousness', against whom it is destined to be
pitted in the final battle that will usher in Jesus' 'second coming'.
In all, then, Evan argues, America is simply acting as the Christian God's
handmaiden in wreaking destruction and death in Iraq. Instead of being blamed or
castigated for this, he argues, it should be praised. This destruction is
Biblically mandated, he repeats, for the Bible has announced that, 'Babylon, the
great, has fallen and has become a dwelling place of demons, a prison for every
foul spirit, and a cage for every unclean and hated bird [.] Therefore, her
plague will come in one day-death and mourning and famine. And she will be
utterly burned with fire [.] Thus with violence the great city Babylon shall be
thrown down and shall not be found anymore'.
But this terrible destruction in Iraq is only the beginning of a bloody trail of
events mandated by a supposedly blood-thirsty and vengeful God. According to
Evans' reading of the Bible, the American invasion of Iraq is what he calls 'the
dress-rehearsal' for the grand global battle of Armageddon between the forces of
Christ and Satan. Prior to this battle, he quotes the Bible as saying, 'demons
and spirits' bound up in the Euphrates in Iraq will be released, and, with an
army of 200 million, will kill off a third of the world's total inhabitants
through nuclear war. This grand battle, Evans writes, is not far off. Hence, he
appeals to Christians to 'put on the armour of God' and 'engage in spiritual
battle'. Now, is the time, he says, to prepare for the impending return of
Christ. Presumably, after Iraq is destroyed through the agency of the Americans,
Christ will suddenly appear in Jerusalem and establish his global empire,
ushering in the end of the world as we know it.
Horrendous as Evans' views are, they do find a powerful echo in Christian
fundamentalist circles today, more so given their growing influence in policy-making
circles in the West, particularly in America. If the world is to be saved from
the Armageddon that Evans and his ilk are bent on calling down from the heavens
it is imperative that Western imperialism and Christian fundamentalism be
interrogated, challenged and opposed, particularly by sincere Christians
themselves.