TV Evangelist John Hagee Wants War With Iran, and He Wants It Now!
by
Bill Barnwell
by Bill Barnwell
If anyone still
thinks that the radical end-times "prophecy" movement
is not a threat to peace and stability, think again. At the popular
level, in terms of the TV preachers and the hot-selling prophecy
books, the dispensational pre-trib stuff still reigns supreme. Most
conservative-leaning Evangelical churches in America today are heavily
influenced by popular dispensational theology to some extent. Even
churches and pastors that don’t teach pretribulationalism still
are influenced by dispensationalism to varying degrees.
The most dangerous
element of this prophetic paradigm, however, is its doom-and-gloom
view of the world. And in most cases, those who have a fascination
with the end of the world have a particular fascination with war
and militarism as well. More problematic, it assumes that their
wars of choice are not just their own foreign policy preferences
or personal opinions. Rather they are ordained by God. In 2003,
more than a few pastors and influential Christian figures basically
said that opposing the Iraq war was opposing God’s end-time plan.
According to Evangelical end-times enthusiasts, if you opposed the
Iraq war, you didn’t just hate your country and the troops, now
you were opposing God and the Bible as well.
An even bigger
obsession for dispensationalists has always been Israel. For the
average dispensationalist, modern-day secular Israel is going to
be the focal point in the end-times. Therefore,
if the Bible really does teach in Daniel 9:27 that the Al-Aqsa Mosque
is going to be torn down for a rebuilt Jewish Temple, why should
any of us seek to prevent it? Sure, it very well might ignite a
regional war and even ignite tensions around the world, but it's
all part of God’s prophetic plan. Not to worry though, things might
not get really ugly until after the "rapture," so the
Christians today who are cheering for events that would bring about
World War III won’t have to worry about it anyway. Unless of course,
they are wrong about the whole thing.
Enter the Rev.
John Hagee. Hagee is the pastor of Cornerstone Church in San
Antonio Texas, where he has 18,000 followers right in his own congregation.
He also has a global television ministry and has sold scores of
prophecy books over the years. John Hagee is perhaps the most powerful
and influential Christian Zionist figure in America. Hagee has a
long history making strange predictions about world events that
are almost always wrong. His books in the late 90’s trumped up Y2K
hysteria to ridiculous levels. He inaccurately predicted that the
assassination of Yitzhak Rabin was the "Beginning of the End"
in the book of the same name. In every book he writes, he is constantly
warning of catastrophe in various forms right around the corner.
According
to one of his fans, he supposedly just preached a sermon predicting
that 2007 would be a "significant" year in Bible prophecy
and that his prophecy claims can be "mathematically" backed
up by the Biblical text.
Given Hagee’s
prior success rate in making predictions, don’t be shocked if 2007
doesn’t shape up to be all that "significant" after all.
As with all popular prophecy teachers, they are immune from making
inaccurate predictions and false prophecies. Their followers simply
forget or forgive them. Maybe they’ll even claim that God changed
His mind. Most don’t even pay attention though and don’t even realize
their superstars are constantly revising their predictions and end-times
charts.
However, Hagee
is not just another goofy eccentric on TBN. He has political clout
and regularly meets with influential national politicians. If you’ve
ever watched him on TV, he clearly basks in this fact and drops
little hints about his discussions with people in governmental authority
and other positions of power. For years Hagee has hosted "A
Night to Honor" Israel and is founder and chairman of Christians
United for Israel. Their goals span beyond supporting Israel,
but also implementing a one-sided and radical approach to the Arab-Israeli
problems in the Middle East. There is no nuance to their policy
prescriptions and ironically (or perhaps not so ironically) the
agenda of Hagee and his group would actually make matters much worse
in the Middle East.
And he has
more than a few fans out there. He has not been afraid to remind
his church and television audience, repeatedly over the years, that
there are "millions in America and around the world watching
this program right now." Whatever the number really is, what
is clear is that Hagee is reaching many people and has a networking
system that spans into the rich and powerful, some of whom are making
national foreign policy decisions.
If left up
to Hagee, there would be a military strike against Iran today. Since
last summer, Hagee has been practically foaming at the mouth for
a new war with Iran. Why? Because he thinks it is the rest of the
world’s job to fight Israel’s wars and because he thinks such a
showdown is a piece of the puzzle in regards to Bible prophecy.
To Hagee, there is no middle ground on this issue. God told Abraham
he would "bless those who bless you and curse those who curse
you" (Gen. 12:3). That means if YOU aren’t on board with wars
that might be in Israel’s interest, but not in the United States’,
then YOU will be cursed by God. At least according to Hagee.
To see just
how bellicose, belligerent, and militaristic Hagee has come, just
watch his speech at the AIPAC Washington conference. Behind
his thundering prose and love for the Jewish people is a militaristic
and even fanatical mindset that is hoping and praying for the world
to fall apart. After all, Jesus can’t come back unless it does,
but all is well since Christians before the "rapture"
will escape the worst of it.
Unfortunately
for the Jewish people, they still await another massive holocaust,
according to many dispensationalists. Anyone interested in this
subject should read our own Gary North’s column, The
Unannounced Reason Behind American Fundamentalism's Support for
the State of Israel. An excerpt:
Nothing can
or will be done by Christians to save Israel’s Jews from this
disaster, for all of the Christians will have been removed from
this world three and a half years prior to the beginning of this
42-month period of tribulation. (The total period of seven years
is interpreted as the fulfillment of the seventieth week of Daniel
[Dan. 9:27].)
In order
for most of today’s Christians to escape physical death, two-thirds
of the Jews in Israel must perish, soon. This is the grim prophetic
trade-off that fundamentalists rarely discuss publicly, but which
is the central motivation in the movement’s support for Israel.
It should be clear why they believe that Israel must be defended
at all costs by the West. If Israel were militarily removed from
history prior to the Rapture, then the strongest case for Christians’
imminent escape from death would have to be abandoned. This would
mean the indefinite delay of the Rapture. The fundamentalist movement
thrives on the doctrine of the imminent Rapture, not the indefinitely
postponed Rapture.
Every time
you hear the phrase, "Jesus is coming back soon," you should mentally
add, "and two-thirds of the Jews of Israel will be dead in ‘soon
plus 84 months.’" Fundamentalists really do believe that they
probably will not die physically, but to secure this faith prophetically,
they must defend the doctrine of an inevitable holocaust.
This specific
motivation for the support of Israel is never preached from any
fundamentalist pulpit. The faithful hear sermons – many, many
sermons – on the pretribulation Rapture. On other occasions, they
hear sermons on the Great Tribulation. But they do not hear the
two themes put together: "We can avoid death, but only because
two-thirds of the Jews of Israel will inevitably die in a future
holocaust. America must therefore support the nation of Israel
in order to keep the Israelis alive until after the Rapture."
Fundamentalist ministers expect their congregations to put two
and two together on their own. It would be politically incorrect
to add up these figures in public.
Again, however,
one can’t make too big a fuss about this, since "Bible prophecy"
demands this carnage. It’s "God’s will" for the world
to fall apart, for tensions to further inflame between Jews and
Arabs, for the United States to lead the charge in a pre-emptive
strike on Iran, to rebuild a third Jewish Temple after tearing down
the Islamic mosque, etc. All you have to do to prove this is cut
passages like Genesis 12, Matthew 24, 2 Thessalonians 2, Ezekiel
36 and 37, and Daniel 9:24–27 out of context (along with the entire
book of Revelation), make up some handy-dandy prophecy charts, and
confidently present it to Biblically illiterate Christians who don’t
know any better.
While there
are many doctrinal disputes amongst Christians, there are none that
have as much practical significance as this one. I strongly disagree
with those who deny the Trinity, but those who deny the deity of
Christ are not clamoring for war, bombs, and destruction. Likewise,
Christians disagree vehemently over issues like eternal security
or the proper mode of baptism, but thankfully we’ve grown up and
stopped killing each other over those issues in the last couple
hundred years.
When it comes
to questionable or inaccurate beliefs about the end-times, however,
they are shaping many people’s foreign policy and worldviews for
the worse. It is causing many to hold troubling escapist views towards
the world. I know this because I am constantly told by other Christians
that "we are not in the business of fixing up the world, we
are just in the business of saving souls until the rapture!"
It is in part because of faulty eschatology that Evangelical Christians,
more than any other demographic group in America, supported the
ill-advised invasion of Iraq in 2003. And it is faulty eschatology
that is causing this same group of people to believe the militaristic
agenda behind Rev. Hagee’s bombastic oratory. After all, it’s all
been ordained, so how can we oppose it?
But maybe,
just maybe, their preciously held beliefs about future prophecy
are way off. Maybe they are dead wrong in their views and maybe
all the wars, destruction and carnage they think are inevitable
aren’t necessarily mandated by God. Maybe
the Bible is teaching exactly the opposite regarding these matters
than what they teach.
Alas, no matter
how many false predictions these guys make, or how many damaging
theological and political beliefs they espouse, people continue
to follow their dangerous teachings. It’s time for both Christian
and non-Christian alike to call this crowd out on their bad theology,
false prophecies, and deadly worldview.
Hopefully
Hagee is right that 2007 is going to be a significant year in Bible
prophecy. It would be significant indeed if Biblical scholars, pastors
and laymen finally and at long last rescued the doctrine of eschatology
from the doom and destruction crowd of militaristic pretribulationists.
Here’s hoping that with each passing year the theology of Hagee
and his ilk is exposed for how Biblically inaccurate and destructive
it really is.
March
22, 2007
Bill
Barnwell [send him mail]
is a pastor and writer from Michigan. He holds both a Master of
Ministry degree and a Master of Arts in Theological Studies degree
from Bethel College in Mishawaka, Indiana. Visit his
blog.
Copyright
© 2007 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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