Israel and the Church - When The Church Picks Sides
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A war can expose what we really believe, and right now it is drawing a sharp line through the church. Some Christians feel morally and spiritually compelled to support modern Israel at all costs. Others look at the mounting civilian deaths, the destruction of Christian communities, and Jesus’ commands to love enemies and forgive, and they cannot reconcile that with cheering a war. We start a new series called Israel and the Church to sort through the arguments with open Bibles and clear eyes, not political slogans.
We walk through why evangelical support for Israel is often described as a spiritual obligation. That includes the Abrahamic covenant in Genesis 12, the language of “blessing” and “cursing,” and how those ideas shape voting, giving, and public advocacy. We also define Christian Zionism and explain how dispensationalism separates God’s plan for ethnic Israel from God’s plan for the Church, often tying modern events to end times prophecy in Revelation, Armageddon expectations, Jerusalem, and even a future Third Temple. We also name the non-theological drivers, like seeing Israel as a key US ally in the Middle East.
Then we slow down and ask the questions many believers are now raising: Who is the promise for, and does ethnic descent guarantee covenant blessings? Does loving Jewish people require endorsing any nation-state’s tactics? Does the Bible actually command unconditional political, financial, and military support? Finally, we turn to the Pauline lens, reading Romans 3 and the claim that there is no difference between Jew and Gentile when it comes to sin, grace, and salvation through Jesus Christ, and we close with an invitation to pray.
Subscribe for the rest of the series, share this with someone who is wrestling with these questions, and leave a review with your take: what should guide a Christian conscience when theology, war, and compassion collide?