How Christian Zionism Shaped American Power and the Fate of Palestine?

PART I - THE MOMENT
Chapter 1: When Belief Became Policy

In early 2025, the United States appointed Mike Huckabee as its ambassador to Israel. On paper, the appointment looked familiar another politician, another loyal ally, another chapter in a long-standing diplomatic relationship. In substance, it marked something unprecedented.

For the first time, a senior American official did not merely sidestep the question of Palestinian statehood or bury it beneath ambiguity. He rejected it outright openly, unapologetically, and not as a matter of strategy, but of faith.

There was no pretense of neutrality. No language of balance. No careful choreography of diplomatic phrasing. Huckabee spoke as a believer, not as a mediator. He framed his role not as representation, but as fulfillment. His support for Israel was not conditional, not pragmatic, not even geopolitical. It was theological.

In interviews and speeches, he did not invoke national interest so much as divine alignment. History, in his telling, was not contested terrain it was settled scripture. The future was not to be negotiated; it was to be revealed.

What made this moment distinct was not Huckabee’s views. Those had been known for decades. What changed was the setting in which they were expressed and accepted. A belief once confined to pulpits, prophecy conferences, and evangelical media now spoke with the authority of the American state.

The question was no longer whether religion influenced politics. That had always been true.

The question was how a particular religious interpretation once marginal, speculative, even controversial within Christianity itself had come to define the posture of the world’s most powerful government toward one of the most enduring conflicts on earth.

Faith Without Ambiguity

Diplomacy is built on ambiguity. It relies on flexible language, open-ended commitments, and the careful management of contradiction. Huckabee rejected that premise entirely.

For him, there was no contradiction. Israel’s sovereignty over all historic Palestine was not a claim to be debated; it was a promise already made. Palestinians did not appear as a people with political rights, but as a problem of timing an inconvenience within a larger divine narrative.

When asked about Palestinian self-determination, Huckabee did not offer policy objections. He offered theology. The land, he argued, had been given. The matter was settled long before modern international law existed.

This was not an aberration. It was the logical endpoint of a worldview that had been incubating in American evangelical culture for more than a century.

What was new was its transparency.

Previous administrations had balanced evangelical pressure with diplomatic language. Even when policy leaned heavily toward Israel, it was wrapped in the rhetoric of peace processes, negotiations, and eventual compromise. Huckabee dispensed with that ritual. The symbolism mattered no longer.

Belief had matured into certainty.

A Minority Belief With Majority Power

Christian Zionism is often described as a fringe ideology. In numerical terms, that is true. It does not represent global Christianity. It is rejected by the Catholic Church, the Orthodox world, and many mainline Protestant denominations. Even among evangelicals, it is not universal.

And yet, its influence far exceeds its size.

This paradox can only be explained by understanding how belief moves through power structures. Christian Zionism did not become influential because it persuaded most Christians. It became influential because it embedded itself where leverage mattered voting blocs, donor networks, media ecosystems, and political appointments.

It offered something politics rarely provides: moral certainty without moral cost.

For believers, it transformed a complex geopolitical conflict into a sacred obligation. For politicians, it delivered a disciplined constituency whose support was unwavering and whose worldview was immune to compromise.

By the time Huckabee was appointed, the alliance between American evangelicalism and Israeli state power no longer needed justification. It had become axiomatic.

The Disappearance of the Palestinian

One of the most revealing features of Christian Zionist rhetoric is not what it says about Israel, but what it omits about Palestinians.

They are rarely described as a people with history, culture, or political claims. Instead, they appear as abstractions obstacles, threats, or background noise within a larger eschatological drama. Their suffering is either denied, spiritualized, or reframed as necessary turbulence on the path to redemption.

This erasure is not accidental. It is theological.

In the Christian Zionist worldview, history is linear and predetermined. Events matter only insofar as they move the world toward an ordained conclusion. Human rights, international law, and moral accountability become secondary to prophecy.

In such a framework, empathy becomes dangerous. To feel too much is to question the script.

Why This Story Must Be Told Backward

It would be tempting to treat Huckabee’s appointment as an isolated incident a provocative figure placed in a sensitive role by a polarized political system. That explanation is comforting, because it suggests reversibility. Elections change. Appointments end.

But this moment was not a deviation. It was a revelation.

To understand it, one must move backward not decades, but centuries. Before American evangelicals. Before Zionism. Before modern nation-states. Back to the point where Christian theology first learned to align itself with power, and where interpretations of scripture began to shape not just belief, but law.

This is not a story about secret conspiracies or sudden radicalization. It is a story about ideas that survived because they adapted ideas that waited patiently until conditions allowed them to govern.

Christian Zionism did not seize power by force. It inherited it.

And like all inherited power, it carries the weight of everything that came before it.

PART II - WHEN CHRISTIANITY LEARNED POWER
Chapter 2: From Martyrdom to Empire

Christianity did not begin as a religion of power. It emerged on the margins of the Roman world poor, persecuted, and politically irrelevant. Its earliest followers possessed no armies, no territory, and no legal standing. What they had was belief: a narrative of suffering, redemption, and divine justice that promised meaning to those crushed beneath imperial rule.

For nearly three centuries, that belief existed in tension with authority. Christians were imprisoned, executed, and excluded from civic life. Martyrdom was not an exception; it was a defining feature of early Christian identity. Power was something imposed from above, not wielded from within.

That relationship changed abruptly in the fourth century.

Constantine and the Conversion of Power

In 313 CE, Emperor Constantine issued the Edict of Milan, legalizing Christianity across the Roman Empire. What followed was not merely tolerance, but transformation. Within decades, Christianity moved from persecuted sect to imperial religion. Under Emperor Theodosius, it became the sole authorized faith of the empire.

The consequences were profound.

Once aligned with the state, Christianity inherited the machinery of law, enforcement, and coercion. Doctrine was no longer debated only in councils and letters; it was codified in statutes. Heresy ceased to be a theological disagreement and became a legal crime.

The faith that had once resisted empire now governed it.

This shift did not erase Christianity’s moral teachings, but it altered their application. Compassion became conditional. Mercy became regulated. Power demanded boundaries, and theology provided them.

It was within this new framework that Jews became a problem.

Theological Difference Becomes Legal Status

Judaism posed a unique challenge to Christian authority. Unlike pagan religions, it could not be dismissed as ignorance. It shared scripture, history, and monotheism. And yet, it rejected Christianity’s central claim: that Jesus was the Messiah.

This rejection was not merely theological. In an empire now defined by Christian truth, dissent carried existential weight. If Christianity was universal, then refusal threatened its coherence.

The solution was theological redefinition.

Jews were cast not as equals with a different covenant, but as a people frozen in error preserved as living proof of Christianity’s triumph, yet denied equality within it. The charge of collective guilt for the crucifixion of Christ the accusation of deicide became a cornerstone of Christian teaching.

This accusation justified exclusion without extermination. Jews were to remain, but only as a subordinated presence.

Law followed doctrine. Jews were barred from public office, restricted in professions, and excluded from political power. Their legal status reflected their theological position: tolerated, but diminished.

Christian supremacy did not require Jewish disappearance. It required Jewish subordination.

From Marginalization to Violence

As Christianity spread across Europe, this framework hardened. What began as legal discrimination evolved into social hostility. Preachers reinforced stereotypes. Art depicted Jews as grotesque or demonic. Popular myths portrayed them as conspirators, poisoners, or enemies of Christendom.

These narratives were not fringe. They were institutional.

During the Crusades, entire Jewish communities were massacred as armies marched eastward in the name of holy war. The logic was simple: why liberate distant lands when enemies of Christ lived among them?

Later centuries brought expulsions from England, France, Spain and the invention of blood libel myths accusing Jews of ritual murder. During outbreaks of plague, Jews were blamed and slaughtered as scapegoats.

Each wave of violence drew legitimacy from theology. Each atrocity could be justified as defense of the faith.

What mattered was not what Jews did, but what they represented.

The Pattern That Endured

This long history matters not because Christian Zionism repeats medieval violence it does not but because it inherits a structural pattern established in this era: the transformation of theology into hierarchy.

Christian power required a theological “other.” Jews filled that role for centuries. Their marginalization helped define Christian identity. Their suffering reinforced Christian authority.

Over time, the forms of exclusion changed. Enlightenment ideas challenged overt religious persecution. Modern antisemitism adopted racial language. The Holocaust forced a reckoning with the most extreme consequences of dehumanization.

But the underlying habit using theology to organize power remained.

Christian Zionism would later reverse the symbol without dismantling the structure. Jews would move from condemned to instrumentalized. The role would change. The logic would not.

Power Learned, Not Forgotten

By the time Christianity fractured in the sixteenth century, it had already learned how to rule. It had learned how belief could justify law, how scripture could shape policy, and how moral certainty could silence dissent.

These lessons did not disappear with the Reformation. They were carried forward reinterpreted, redistributed, and eventually radicalized.

The story of Christian Zionism does not begin with love for Jews or support for Israel. It begins here, at the moment when faith learned to command, and when difference became destiny.

To understand how scripture later became a political map, one must next understand how scripture itself escaped centralized control.

PART III - BREAKING THE LOCK ON SCRIPTURE
Chapter 3: When the Bible Left the Church

For more than a thousand years, Christian doctrine flowed in one direction. Interpretation descended from authority. Scripture was mediated through priests, councils, and canon law. The Bible existed, but it did not belong to the people. It was read in Latin, guarded by institutions, and explained within carefully maintained boundaries.

This system was not merely theological. It was political. Control over interpretation meant control over meaning and control over meaning meant control over society.

The Reformation did not begin as an attempt to dismantle this structure. It began as a protest against abuse. What followed, however, would permanently alter the relationship between belief and power.

The First Cracks

Long before Martin Luther nailed his theses to a church door, dissent had already begun to stir. In fourteenth-century England, John Wycliffe argued that scripture not the Church was the ultimate authority. He translated the Bible into English so ordinary people could read it themselves.

In Bohemia, Jan Hus echoed similar ideas, calling for reform and denouncing corruption. Both men were condemned. Hus was executed. Wycliffe’s remains were exhumed and burned posthumously. The message was clear: interpretation was not a right it was a threat.

But the ideas survived.

What Wycliffe and Hus introduced was not a new theology, but a dangerous premise: that scripture could exist outside institutional control.

Once that premise was accepted, containment became impossible.

Luther and the Unintended Revolution

Martin Luther’s challenge to the Catholic Church in 1517 is often remembered as a theological dispute over indulgences. In reality, it was an assault on authority itself. By insisting that salvation came through faith alone and scripture alone, Luther severed the Church’s monopoly on meaning.

The printing press amplified this rupture. Pamphlets circulated rapidly. Vernacular Bibles spread. Suddenly, interpretation became participatory.

This democratization was revolutionary and destabilizing.

Luther did not intend to unleash interpretive chaos. He replaced one authority with another: scripture as he understood it. He believed the Bible was clear, self-interpreting, and anchored in divine intent. He also believed that Jews, by rejecting Christ, were blind and stubborn a belief he articulated with ferocity in his later writings.

Here lies a central irony. The Reformation shattered centralized authority, but it did not eradicate intolerance. It redistributed it.

The Bible was freed but not purified.

When Authority Fractures, Meaning Multiplies

Once scripture left the Church, it did not land in a vacuum. It entered societies already fractured by war, plague, scientific discovery, and political upheaval. Competing interpretations emerged rapidly.

Some were restrained. Others were radical.

Without a central arbiter, the question was no longer what does the Church say? but what does the Bible mean to me? This shift placed enormous interpretive power in individual hands often without historical context, linguistic training, or ethical guardrails.

For many, this freedom was exhilarating. For others, it was terrifying. If meaning was no longer fixed, then certainty had to be rebuilt elsewhere.

It was in this environment that apocalyptic thinking began to flourish.

The Rise of End-Time Obsession

The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were marked by instability. Empires rose and fell. Religious wars devastated Europe. Scientific discoveries challenged inherited cosmologies. Time itself seemed accelerated.

Many Protestants turned to prophecy not as metaphor, but as map. The Book of Revelation, once treated cautiously, became a manual for decoding history. Biblical timelines were calculated. Symbols were literalized. The end was not abstract it was imminent.

This tendency was especially strong among groups already alienated from institutional power. For them, apocalypse offered reassurance. Chaos was not meaningless. It was ordained.

Crucially, Jews re-entered this narrative not as enemies to be destroyed, but as actors in a divine plan.

This was a shift but not a reconciliation.

From Condemnation to Instrumentalization

In medieval Christianity, Jews were blamed for the past the crucifixion. In emerging Protestant eschatology, Jews were repositioned as keys to the future.

Their return to the Holy Land became necessary for prophecy to unfold. Their conversion or destruction became a precondition for salvation history.

This reframing did not arise from renewed respect for Judaism. It arose from a new hunger for certainty.

Jews were no longer the rejected people. They were the required people.

The moral problem remained unchanged. Jews were still not seen as subjects with agency, history, or rights. They were components in a system not of their making.

Scripture Without a Brake

By the time Protestantism fractured into countless denominations, one truth had become unavoidable: scripture alone did not produce unity. It produced competition.

Each group claimed fidelity to the text. Each accused others of corruption. The Bible became a battlefield of meaning, and the loudest interpretations often gained the widest followings.

This environment rewarded simplicity over nuance, certainty over humility, and literalism over ethics.

The stage was set for a theology that would promise clarity in an age of uncertainty a theology that would turn prophecy into policy and belief into inevitability.

That theology would emerge in the nineteenth century, not from ancient tradition, but from modern anxiety.

PART IV - APOCALYPSE BECOMES SYSTEM
Chapter 4: Inventing the End of History

By the nineteenth century, the world no longer felt stable. Empires trembled. Revolutions overturned monarchies. Science rewrote humanity’s place in the universe. Industrialization uprooted communities and compressed time itself. For many, history no longer appeared cyclical or patient it felt as though it were accelerating toward something unknown and irreversible.

In moments like these, theology rarely retreats. It adapts.

For Protestant thinkers already accustomed to reading scripture without centralized authority, the Bible became not only a source of comfort, but a diagnostic tool. If the present felt chaotic, perhaps it was because the end was near. If society appeared morally unmoored, perhaps decay itself was proof of prophecy.

This hunger for order did not produce metaphor. It produced system.

John Nelson Darby and the Architecture of Destiny

John Nelson Darby was not a revolutionary by temperament. He was a meticulous thinker, a former Anglican priest who distrusted institutions and believed true Christianity had been corrupted by power. In that sense, he was a product of the Reformation’s long shadow.

What distinguished Darby was not passion, but precision.

In the 1830s, as leader of the Plymouth Brethren movement, Darby articulated a theological framework that would come to be known as Dispensationalism. Rather than viewing history as a continuous moral struggle, Darby divided it into discrete eras “dispensations” each governed by a specific divine arrangement between God and humanity.

Human history, in his model, unfolded across seven stages. Each ended not in gradual transformation, but in failure. Redemption did not emerge from human effort. It arrived through rupture.

This was not theology as tradition. It was theology as timetable.

The Jews Repositioned

Darby’s most consequential innovation concerned the role of Jews in salvation history.

Unlike earlier Christian theology, which held that the Church had replaced Israel as God’s chosen people, Darby insisted on a strict separation between God’s plan for Christians and God’s plan for Jews. The promises made to Israel, he argued, had never been revoked. They were merely postponed.

This distinction required a literal interpretation of prophecy. Biblical references to Israel could not be spiritualized. They referred to actual land, actual people, actual borders.

From this premise followed a series of conclusions that would later reshape global politics:

1.Jews must return to Palestine

2.A Jewish state must be reestablished

3.Jerusalem must come under Jewish control

4.A final apocalyptic conflict must occur

5.Christ would return only after this sequence was complete

The end of the world was no longer mysterious. It was logistical.

Certainty in an Age of Doubt

Dispensationalism offered something uniquely modern: predictive clarity. While science explained the mechanics of the universe, Darby’s theology explained its purpose. History was no longer open-ended or morally ambiguous. It was scripted.

This certainty was intoxicating.

For believers disoriented by social change, Dispensationalism transformed anxiety into assurance. Wars were not tragedies; they were signs. Suffering was not failure; it was confirmation.

Crucially, this framework absolved believers of responsibility for outcomes. If catastrophe was inevitable, then prevention was irrelevant. Peace efforts could even be sinful interference with divine will.

In this worldview, morality was subordinate to prophecy.

From Theology to Geography

Darby’s ideas did not immediately dominate Christian thought. They were controversial, contested, and initially confined to small circles. But they possessed a quality that would later ensure their survival: portability.

Dispensationalism was easy to teach, easy to diagram, and easy to preach. It reduced complexity to sequence. It rewarded literalism. It flattered believers by positioning them as possessors of secret knowledge.

Darby traveled extensively, particularly in the United States, where his ideas found an eager audience among revivalist Protestants. America, a young nation steeped in biblical language and frontier anxiety, proved fertile ground.

Here, prophecy met optimism.

The restoration of Jews to Palestine was no longer just a theological abstraction. It was imagined as a future geopolitical event one in which America could play a role.

Faith began to look outward.

The Moral Cost of a Scripted World

What Dispensationalism could not accommodate was ethical interruption. If history followed a divine script, then suffering along the way was not injustice it was necessity.

Palestinians, though largely absent from Darby’s writings, were rendered invisible by implication. A land described as promised could not simultaneously be inhabited in any meaningful moral sense. Those living there were temporary occupants in someone else’s story.

This erasure was not driven by hatred. It was driven by irrelevance.

In a system obsessed with endings, the present mattered only as a means.

The System Awaits a Voice

Darby did not live to see his theology conquer the mainstream. His writings remained influential but niche, his followers devoted but limited. What his system required was amplification translation into accessible language, institutional backing, and mass distribution.

That amplification would arrive in the early twentieth century, not through a new prophet, but through a book that quietly rewrote how millions read the Bible itself.

PART V - THE BOOK THAT REWROTE THE BIBLE
Chapter 5: Notes That Became Scripture

When Cyrus Ingerson Scofield published the Scofield Reference Bible in 1909, he did not present it as a revolution. There were no manifestos, no declarations of doctrinal upheaval. It appeared, at first glance, to be what American Protestants had long relied upon: a Bible designed to help believers understand scripture.

What made Scofield’s work different was not the text itself, but what surrounded it.

For the first time, a specific theological interpretation Dispensationalism was embedded directly alongside the biblical verses it claimed to explain. Footnotes, cross-references, and summaries guided readers toward a particular reading of prophecy, history, and destiny. Over time, those notes would become indistinguishable from scripture in the minds of millions.

This was not deception. It was design.

Authority by Proximity

Scofield understood something fundamental about belief: interpretation gains power when it masquerades as neutrality. His notes did not argue; they clarified. They did not persuade; they instructed. Written in calm, authoritative prose, they framed Darby’s system not as one possibility among many, but as the Bible’s natural meaning.

Readers encountering prophecy did not see alternatives. They saw explanation.

This proximity collapsed distance. What Darby had systematized as theology, Scofield normalized as understanding. The Bible no longer required teachers or tradition. It came pre-interpreted.

In doing so, Scofield solved the Reformation’s greatest problem: how to preserve certainty after authority had fractured.

The Making of a Messenger

Scofield himself was an unlikely architect of religious transformation. His early life was marked by instability financial failure, accusations of fraud, and personal scandal. He was not a scholar in the traditional sense. He held no advanced theological degrees.

What he possessed instead was instinct.

Scofield knew how to speak to American Protestants at a time when literacy was rising and institutional trust was declining. His language was direct. His tone was reassuring. His theology promised order.

But Scofield’s rise was not purely organic.

Patronage and Promotion

Behind the scenes, the Scofield Reference Bible benefited from extraordinary support. Among Scofield’s most influential backers was Samuel Untermyer, a prominent Jewish-American lawyer, financier, and committed Zionist.

Untermyer recognized what few others did: that Christian belief could succeed where Jewish advocacy alone could not. Political Zionism needed allies. Evangelical Christianity offered numbers, passion, and moral framing.

Untermyer’s support did not shape Scofield’s theology Dispensationalism already required Jewish restoration but it enabled its dissemination. Through funding, introductions, and institutional access, Scofield’s work gained credibility and reach it otherwise would not have achieved.

This was not conspiracy. It was convergence.

Zionist ambition and Christian prophecy aligned, each seeing in the other a means to its own end.

When Interpretation Becomes Infrastructure

The Scofield Reference Bible spread rapidly. It was adopted by seminaries, Bible colleges, and missionary organizations. Pastors trained on Scofield taught congregations who trusted Scofield. The cycle reinforced itself.

Within a generation, Dispensationalism no longer felt new. It felt inherited.

What made the transformation complete was the absence of friction. Readers rarely encountered competing interpretations. The notes framed alternative readings as confusion or compromise. Over time, the distinction between Bible and commentary eroded.

This fusion had consequences.

If the Bible itself demanded Jewish restoration to Palestine, then support for Israel ceased to be a political preference. It became obedience. To question it was to question scripture.

The Quiet Disappearance of Ethics

In Scofield’s system, morality was displaced by chronology. Justice yielded to sequence. Compassion became secondary to fulfillment.

This did not require cruelty. It required detachment.

Suffering could be acknowledged without being addressed. Palestinians when mentioned at all were rendered incidental. They existed outside the prophetic narrative and therefore outside moral urgency.

What mattered was alignment with the plan.

By embedding prophecy into the Bible’s margins, Scofield ensured that this alignment would persist long after his death. His work outlived him because it did not demand loyalty to a man, only fidelity to scripture as interpreted.

Scripture as Destiny

By the mid-twentieth century, the Scofield Reference Bible had shaped the theological imagination of American evangelicalism. Pastors preached from it. Politicians raised within it absorbed its assumptions. Institutions trained leaders who took its framework for granted.

Dispensationalism no longer needed defenders. It had become background.

And background belief is the most dangerous kind.

Because it does not announce itself.
It governs quietly.
It waits.

By the time global politics created an opportunity for prophecy to intersect with power, the theology was ready.

All it required was an audience and a stage.

PART VI - WHEN FAITH ENTERED THE WHITE HOUSE
Chapter 6: Prophecy as Foreign Policy

By the time Israel was declared a state in 1948, the theological groundwork in the United States had already been laid. For millions of American evangelicals raised on dispensational teaching, the event was not merely geopolitical. It was confirmatory. History, it seemed, was behaving as predicted.

What followed was not celebration alone, but interpretation.

Israel’s existence became evidence that prophecy was unfolding in real time. Every subsequent war, every territorial shift, every diplomatic crisis was read not through the language of international relations, but through scripture. Politics became commentary. News became exegesis.

American policy did not immediately reflect this worldview. Early U.S.–Israel relations were cautious, strategic, and shaped by Cold War calculations. But beneath official restraint, belief was accumulating.

It would take decades and a series of political transformations for prophecy to cross fully into policy.

The Evangelical Vote Comes of Age

The late twentieth century marked a turning point in American politics. Social upheaval, civil rights movements, and cultural liberalization unsettled conservative Christians. Many felt alienated from a society that no longer reflected their moral assumptions.

Evangelical leaders responded by organizing.

Religious identity became political identity. Voting blocs formed. Media networks expanded. Churches became mobilization hubs. The language of faith merged with the language of national destiny.

Israel occupied a central place in this fusion. Supporting it required no compromise on social values. It carried no domestic political cost. And it offered moral clarity in a fractured world.

By the time Ronald Reagan entered the White House, evangelical influence was impossible to ignore.

Reagan and the Language of Destiny

Reagan was not a theologian. But he understood narrative.

In speeches and private conversations, he echoed dispensational themes speaking openly about Armageddon, prophecy, and the possibility that his generation might witness the end of history. These references were not policy declarations. They were signals.

Evangelicals heard them clearly.

Under Reagan, U.S.–Israel relations deepened. Military cooperation expanded. Diplomatic cover became more reliable. Criticism softened.

What mattered was not explicit doctrine, but resonance. A shared vocabulary of destiny replaced the language of restraint.

Prophecy did not yet dictate policy. But it shaped the atmosphere in which policy was made.

From Rhetoric to Infrastructure

By the 1990s, Christian Zionism had evolved beyond belief into organization. Groups like Christians United for Israel (CUFI), founded by Pastor John Hagee, professionalized evangelical support for Israel.

These organizations did not operate as prayer circles. They functioned as lobbying machines.

They raised funds. They mobilized voters. They cultivated relationships with lawmakers. They framed support for Israel as a litmus test of faith and patriotism.

Opposition was not debated it was spiritualized.

To criticize Israeli policy was to oppose God’s plan. To advocate Palestinian rights was to side with forces aligned against divine purpose.

This framing neutralized ethical inquiry. It replaced argument with allegiance.

The Embassy Move

The relocation of the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem in 2018 marked a culmination.

For decades, the move had been avoided by successive administrations, despite congressional pressure. Jerusalem’s status was widely recognized as a final-status issue one whose resolution required negotiation.

When the move finally occurred, it was celebrated not as diplomacy, but as fulfillment.

Evangelical leaders framed the decision in biblical terms. Trump, though personally detached from theology, understood the power of symbolism. He delivered what prophecy-minded voters had long desired.

The consequences for Palestinians, for international law, for regional stability were secondary.

What mattered was obedience.

Faith That Outlasts Presidents

Christian Zionism’s greatest political strength lies in its durability. Unlike interest-based alliances, it does not fade when circumstances change. It does not respond to evidence or outcomes. It does not recalibrate.

Because it is rooted in belief, not strategy.

Presidents come and go. Administrations shift tone. But the underlying theology remains intact, passed from pulpit to classroom to ballot box.

Even leaders without evangelical backgrounds adopt its language, if only to maintain support. Over time, the vocabulary becomes normalized. Destiny replaces deliberation.

When Policy Becomes Sacrament

Foreign policy, at its most dangerous, ceases to be a tool and becomes a ritual. Actions are performed not to achieve outcomes, but to affirm identity.

Christian Zionism transformed support for Israel into such a ritual.

It sanctified decisions that would otherwise demand scrutiny. It shielded policy from accountability. And it rendered Palestinian suffering not tragic, but incidental.

In doing so, it crossed a critical threshold.

Belief no longer influenced policy.
Policy became an expression of belief.

And when belief governs power, consequences are no longer measured in success or failure but in faithfulness.

PART VII -THE MORAL RECKONING
Chapter 7: When Support Becomes Erasure

Christian Zionism presents itself as solidarity. Its language is affectionate, reverent, even protective. Israel is praised as a miracle, a fulfillment, a divine vindication after centuries of Jewish suffering. To its adherents, this support feels not only righteous, but redemptive.

And yet, beneath the surface affirmation lies a profound ethical contradiction.

Christian Zionism does not ultimately seek Jewish flourishing in the world as it is. It seeks Jewish participation in a world that must end.

Love Without Survival

In dispensational theology, Jews are essential but temporary.

They must return to the land. They must rebuild the state. They must trigger prophecy. But in the final accounting, they do not remain as Jews. At the culmination of history, they either convert to Christianity or are destroyed alongside the rest of the unredeemed world.

Salvation, in this system, is not plural. Covenant is not enduring. Jewish life is affirmed only insofar as it advances a Christian conclusion.

This is not continuity with Judaism. It is conditional tolerance.

The support offered by Christian Zionism is therefore unlike political alliance or ethical solidarity. It is instrumental. Jews are valued not as a people with an open future, but as actors in a predetermined script.

This is why theologians such as Rosemary Radford Ruether argued that Christian Zionism represents not a break from antisemitism, but its mutation. Where medieval theology condemned Jews for rejecting Christ in the past, modern dispensationalism assigns them a role that ends with their disappearance in the future.

The logic changes. The structure remains.

Palestinians Outside the Moral Frame

If Jews are instrumentalized, Palestinians are erased.

Christian Zionist theology has no conceptual space for Palestinian humanity. They do not appear as moral subjects, only as background presence in a land defined by promise rather than people. Their displacement is not injustice it is inconvenience. Their suffering is not tragedy it is turbulence.

This erasure is not emotional. It is structural.

In a prophetic worldview, compassion becomes selective. Justice applies only within the script. Those outside it may be acknowledged, but they are never centered.

This is why Palestinian appeals to international law, human rights, or coexistence consistently fail to penetrate Christian Zionist discourse. Such appeals speak the language of ethics. Christian Zionism speaks the language of inevitability.

Where inevitability reigns, responsibility dissolves.

Christianity Pushes Back

Despite its political visibility, Christian Zionism is not Christianity’s dominant voice.

The Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox traditions, and many Protestant denominations have repeatedly rejected dispensational theology. They emphasize contextual biblical interpretation, moral accountability, and the inseparability of faith from justice.

These traditions argue that scripture does not mandate territorial conquest, nor does it sanctify suffering. They reject the notion that God’s purposes require the violation of human dignity.

For them, prophecy is not a schedule. It is a call to transformation.

This theological divide is not academic. It reflects fundamentally different understandings of what faith is for.

Is religion meant to explain the world or to heal it?

Faith as Escape, Faith as Obligation

Christian Zionism offers escape. It absolves believers of responsibility by locating resolution in the future rather than the present. Suffering becomes tolerable because it is temporary. Violence becomes permissible because it is necessary.

But other Christian traditions insist on obligation. They argue that faith binds believers to the present moment to the lives directly affected by policy, power, and silence.

This is why Christian Zionism provokes such fierce opposition among theologians who see it as a betrayal of Christianity’s ethical core. It transforms religion from a moral force into an accelerant.

Why Belief Endures Where Policy Fails

Interest-based alliances shift when costs rise. Faith-based alliances do not.

This is why Christian Zionism has proven so resilient within American politics. Evidence does not weaken it. Atrocity does not dismantle it. Criticism often strengthens it by reinforcing narratives of persecution and chosenness.

Belief does not negotiate.

This makes faith-driven foreign policy uniquely dangerous. It cannot be moderated by outcomes. It cannot be corrected by failure. And it does not require success only loyalty.

The Final Cost

The tragedy of Christian Zionism is not that it is religious, but that it is closed.

It seals history before it has finished unfolding. It forecloses alternatives. It denies Palestinians a future and Jews an open-ended present. And it binds American power to a theology that cannot be accountable to human consequence.

What began as an attempt to impose order on uncertainty has become a justification for perpetual injustice.

The alliance between Christian Zionism and American power did not emerge from malice. It emerged from fear fear of chaos, fear of ambiguity, fear of a world without script.

But fear, once given authority, reshapes reality.

What Remains

This book does not argue that belief must be removed from public life. It argues that belief must be examined especially when it governs others who do not share it.

When faith becomes policy, it ceases to belong only to believers. It becomes a force imposed on the world.

And when theology demands suffering as proof, it is not faith that is being defended but power.

The question now is not whether Christian Zionism will disappear. Beliefs rarely do.

The question is whether its consequences will continue to be treated as destiny or finally recognized as choice.

scofield bible

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