Jerry-Rigging the Truth
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Sat Apr 22, 2006 at 03:53:28 PM EST
Jerry Falwell, leader of myriads of right-wing fundamentalist Christians, says a lot of stupid things.  We'll mention just two.

First of all, Falwell claimed recently that Democrats have "irreconcilable differences" with evangelicals.  I'm pretty sure I know what he'd consider to be "irreconcilable differences" but I wasn't able to learn the specifics.  However, I do know a bunch of people who call themselves "evangelicals" who would take umbrage with his comment.  First of all, they don't consider Falwell an evangelical, they consider him a freaky fundamentalist.  And some of these real evangelicals are, in fact, Democrats.  Methinks Falwell has "irreconcilable differences" with speaking the truth.  

Falwell made several other stupid statements in a sermon about the so-called Antichrist.  We're lumping them all together and counting them as the second really stupid thing Jerry has said recently.  

Falwell gave a sermon on the "second coming of Jesus Christ" to a group of pastors in conference in Kingsport, Tennessee a week or so ago.  In that sermon he "asserted" what he calls "biblically-based truths" which included the notion that Christ could return soon and "that the Antichrist may possibly be alive on the earth today."  (Notice the qualifiers:  "could" and "may possibly.")

Well a lot of religious Neanderthals believe this nonsense, but Falwell took things a step further.  "Since Jesus came to the earth the first time 2,000 years ago as a Jewish male, many evangelicals believe the Antichrist will, by necessity, be a Jewish male.  This belief is 2,000 years old and has no anti-Semitic roots.  This is simply historic and prophetic orthodox Christian doctrine that many theologians, Christian and non-Christian, have understood for two millennia."

One of the things this illustrates is that Falwell (and others of his ilk) can make biblical material say just about anything they so desire.  But this goofiness about the Antichrist being a Jewish male, and that this belief is 2000 years old and not anti-Semitic, and that many non-Christian theologians have believed this for two millennia is laughable--actually it's hysterical!

And the part about not having anti-Semitic roots is either an outright lie, or Falwell hasn't done his homework.

Falwell uses several passages from the Bible and the New Testament to "prove" his point, but these passages might as well be talking about a West Virginia snake handler as the Antichrist.  For example, from Gen. 49:17 (I believe this is from the King James Version):   "Dan shall be a serpent by the way, an adder in the path, that biteth the horse heels, so that his rider shall fall backward." Whatever Falwell thinks this might mean, there isn't a competent biblical scholar anywhere who would believe it points to a Jewish male as some sort of dictator- Antichrist living in the 21st century.  

Jerry also quotes from the prophet Jeremiah claiming that in Jer. 8:16 and 17, Jeremiah is prophesying about the Christian futurist fable of the "tribulation."  "The snorting of horses was heard from Dan: the whole land trembled at the sound..."  

Jerry is wrong here, too.  Actually, I think it's pretty clear these biblical verses are all prophesying about Falwell.  I think in the near future Jerry is going to be riding a horse with James Dobson out in Colorado, a snake is going to bite the horse's heel, Jerry's going to be thrown on his ass and that will begin the tribulation!  (Hey!  That makes just as much sense as Jerry's interpretation!)

Then Falwell refers to "church fathers" who "generally believed in a personal Antichrist."  He tells how Saint John Chrysostom (347-407 C.E.) [Falwell doesn't call him "saint," though!] had figured out that the Antichrist would be a Jewish dictator from the tribe of Dan."

What Falwell doesn't say, or perhaps doesn't know, is that St. John Chrysostom was one of the worst anti-Semites in the history of the Christian church.  He hated Jews with a passion and claimed they were depraved and degenerate.  St. John C. says "...the synagogue is not only a whorehouse and a theatre: it is also a den of thieves and a haunt of wild animals...not the cave of a wild animal merely, but of an unclean wild animal."

This paragon of piety, Saint John C., calls Jews the "most miserable of all men!  They are lustful, rapacious, greedy, perfidious bandits, pests of the universe...Are they not inveterate murderers, destroyers, men possessed by the devil?  Jews are impure and impious, and their synagogue is a house of prostitution, a lair of beasts, a place of shame and ridicule, the domicile of the devil, as is also the soul of the Jew.  As a matter of fact, Jews worship the devil: their rites are criminal and unchaste; their religion a disease; their synagogue an assembly of crooks, a den of thieves, a cavern of devils, an abyss of perdition!"  (from "Six Homilies Against the Jews")

Of course if Chrysostom thought about the so-called Antichrist at all, he would think this figment of fevered imaginations would be a Jewish male!  He hated the Jews!

I'm sure that Jerry would refute these anti-Semitic comments of Saint John C.  Such refutation, however, immediately raises the issue as to why Jerry would accept Saint John C's notions with regard to the Antichrist?  What makes one more valid than the other especially when the Jewish Antichrist is a direct result of Chrysostom's hatred for Jews?  It would seem that Saint John Chrysostom does not know what he is talking about, no matter the subject?  Everything he says is doggie-do?

To conclude:  Falwell received a certain amount of criticism for his sermon to the pastors in Tennessee because some thought it could be construed as anti-Semitic, so on his Website he has taken extra pains to show that just because he believes that the Antichrist is living on earth right now and is a Jewish male, does not mean that he is anti-Semitic or that this is an anti-Semitic viewpoint.  Oh, my goodness, no!  Jerry loves the Jews and he loves Israel and he's traveled to Israel more than 30 times and met with various Israeli prime ministers, and blah, blah, blah.

Yet...you gotta wonder.  You see, in spite of all his protestations of being a lover of the Jews and Israel, Jerry still believes the Jewish people are going to hell unless they accept the Lord Jesus Christ as their personal savior.  

Now that may not be anti-Semitic, but it sure as hell ain't kosher!  




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...and I'll note it again: "Christian Zionists" are all for Israel and Israeli expansion, they might even call the Jews one of "God's chosen people" (besides themselves, of course), but they are not terribly comfortable with Jewish people being, well, Jewish.

The "Christian Zionist" dominionists would be far happier if every Jew worldwide went to Israel (even the population of Jews in the US--it's been estimated there are more observant Orthodox Jews in New York City alone than in all of Israel--and even if they are from Jewish movements which disagree with Zionism) and if they all converted to "Messianic Judaism"--aka Assemblies of God-style neopentecostalism (in fact, most "Messianic" congregations outside of Jews for Jesus are satellite "missions" of Assemblies of God churches) where the observants keep kashrut, call their mission-churches "synagogues", refer to the pastor as "rabbi", and celebrate Rosh Hashanah along with Christmas and Passover along with Easter. :P  (Jews for Judaism details much better than I could just how broken this concept is from a Jewish perspective.)

Much of the Jewish population is starting to wake up and realise they've been essentially kept in a protection racket for the past fifty or so years (first the ADL, then the president of the Union for Reform Judaism, and now to the point that the group Jews on First has been founded specifically to fight dominionist attacks on the Jewish community), and dominionists are not liking the Jews getting "uppity" with them.  (Some of the demonisation of groups has gotten quite vicious; the comments to this article detail some examples.)

For that matter, I also am amused at how often premillenial-dispensationalist dominionists will claim that "since the beginning of Christianity" people have been saying this stuff.  No matter than the entire concept of the Rapture and premillenial dispensationalism is one of the youngest concepts in Christianity (in fact, the only major theological change that dates from a younger period is pentecostalism itself, which is heavily influenced by premillenial dispensationalism; the "Rapture" as a concept in Christianity only is around 160 or so years old, and is largely tied into the "Holiness" movement that spawned pentecostalism (and later, dominion theology, the major basis for dominionism itself in premillenial-dispensationalist churches)).

Seeing as quite literally the concept did not exist in Christianity (mainstream or otherwise) until John Darby founded the Plymouth Brethren in the 1830's and in fact was not even widely popularised until the 1870's outside of the Brethren, it's a little bit...disingenious to claim that Christianity has always had a concept of both Jesus and the Antichrist coming Real Soon Now.  (Very interestingly, premillenial-dispensationalists almost NEVER touch upon the entire concept of "Rapture" being a 19th-century invention, much as the "signs and wonders" neopentes also don't go so much into the fact that the entire pentecostal movement has only this year hit its centennial mark and that the "spiritual warfare" movement is even younger.)

(Also of interest, of the three subgroups of "Brethren", the two more liberal ones are essentially evangelical groups, and the "Exclusive Brethren" are generally regarded as a highly coercive religious group; in fact, one of the few existing studies on people who were raised in coercive religious groups focuses on Exclusive Brethren walkaways.  The Exclusive Brethren also have connections to dominionist movements in the US, Australia and New Zealand.)

by dogemperor on Sat Apr 22, 2006 at 11:22:11 PM EST



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