So long as Christian Zionism holds sway over the minds of Trump, Congress, Senate, and other spheres of our society, not only will antisemitism laws be put into effect, making us guilty of hate speech if we speak truth about Zionists, but misplaced sympathy for Israeli Zionists and their collaborators throughout our government will allow them to exercise power. @Linda
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Michael Rectenwald, Ph.D. on X
Christian Zionism is often dismissed as a modern invention—something cooked up in the nineteenth century by dispensationalists, popularized by the Scofield Reference Bible, and amplified through Hal Lindsey’s Late Great Planet Earth and the Left Behind series. While those elements certainly represent its most visible contemporary expression, the story runs much deeper. Christian Zionism, or “restorationism” as it was earlier known, is a particular Protestant interpretive tradition that insists the Jews and the land of Israel retain ongoing theological significance in God’s plan. It stands in persistent tension with the dominant non-Zionist consensus in Christian theology—often labeled supersessionism or replacement theology—which views the Church as the new or true Israel.
In the supersessionist reading, the Old Testament land promises to Abraham are fulfilled spiritually in Christ. They are transferred to the universal Church or point toward the heavenly Jerusalem rather than any earthly real estate. Israel’s role was temporary—a shadow or illustration completed in the Church. Christian Zionism rejects this framework. It emphasizes the “grafting in” of Gentiles onto the Jewish olive tree (Romans 11:17-18) and insists that ethnic Israel’s calling and land promises remain irrevocable (Romans 11:29). In this view, the modern Jewish return to the land represents, at least in part, prophetic fulfillment.
Christian Zionism significantly predates modern Jewish political Zionism—by some 300 years. It emerged among second-generation Protestant Reformers who interpreted biblical prophecy literally, anticipating a physical return of the Jews to the Holy Land as a precursor to end-times events or the fulfillment of God’s covenants with Abraham. Jewish political Zionism, by contrast, arose in the late 19th century as a largely secular, nationalist response to European antisemitism, led by Theodor Herzl. The two movements intersected productively, with Christian restorationists offering theological, political, and diplomatic support that helped legitimize and advance Jewish Zionist aims, particularly in Britain and the United States. Christians often framed Jewish restoration in eschatological terms (including eventual conversion), while Jewish Zionists prioritized self-determination and refuge. This pragmatic alliance proved instrumental in the founding of the modern Jewish state.
Biblical and Early Foundations: The Core Theological Divide
The central tension traces back to the New Testament itself. Paul describes Gentiles as grafted into the Jewish olive tree and Christians as part of “the Israel of God” (Galatians 6:16). Supersessionist interpretations see this as the Church fully inheriting and replacing Israel’s role. The Parable of the Tenants (Matthew 21:33–46 and parallels) is frequently cited: God leases His vineyard to Israel, sends prophets (who are rejected), then His Son (who is murdered). The vineyard is given to “others”—the Church.
Christian Zionism, however, maintains that the Bible’s narrative keeps ethnic Israel and the physical land central even after Christ. The Abrahamic covenants (Genesis 12, 15, 17) are read as unconditional and everlasting for the Jewish people “according to the flesh.” Early Jewish believers in Jesus saw themselves as faithful Israelites, not as founders of a new religion that discarded ethnic and territorial identity. Yet as Gentile converts multiplied, the Church increasingly positioned itself as superseding Judaism. This view dominated for roughly 1,600 years.
The Reformation and Puritan Launchpad
Restorationist ideas gained little traction among Lutherans. Martin Luther’s early friendliness toward Jews gave way to fierce opposition in On the Jews and Their Lies (1543). Real momentum developed in Calvinist and especially English Protestant circles. Early figures like Francis Kett (executed in 1589) and Edmund Bunny advocated Jewish return to Palestine as part of God’s plan. Among the Puritans of the 17th century, apocalyptic hopes revived expectations of a literal Jewish restoration.
John Milton exemplifies this Puritan stream. In Paradise Regained (1671), Jesus anticipates the Jews’ return to their “native land” through divine providence, cleaving rivers as in the Exodus. Milton’s De Doctrina Christiana further supports restorationist themes. He aligned theologically with figures like Thomas Brightman, Joseph Mede, and Increase Mather, even as his political engagement remained limited. His support for Oliver Cromwell, who facilitated the informal readmission of Jews to England in the 1650s after their 1290 expulsion, occurred amid this millenarian climate.
German Pietism and 19th-Century Activism
German Pietism, beginning with Philipp Jakob Spener in 1675, promoted love for Jews and prioritized their evangelization, countering centuries of contempt. In the 19th century, the French Revolution and prophetic revivals spurred historicist premillennialism. British evangelicals like Lord Shaftesbury actively promoted Jewish settlement in Palestine for biblical and strategic reasons, influencing policy as the Ottoman Empire declined. John Nelson Darby advanced dispensational premillennialism, sharply distinguishing Israel from the Church and assigning national Israel a future role in tribulation and the millennial kingdom—though Darby himself was more passive about engineering return in the present “church age.”
The Scofield Reference Bible and Popularization in America
No single publication did more to embed Christian Zionism in American evangelicalism than the Scofield Reference Bible, first published in 1909 by Cyrus I. Scofield. Building on Darby’s framework, Scofield’s annotated King James Version presented dispensationalism as straightforward biblical truth. Its notes emphasized a literal interpretation of prophecy, a strict separation between Israel and the Church, a pre-tribulation rapture, and a future role for national Israel—including restoration to the land.
Particularly influential was Scofield’s commentary on Genesis 12:3 (“I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee”), which framed blessing or cursing Israel as a divine principle applying to nations and individuals. This reading, reinforced in later editions, encouraged uncritical support for Jewish restoration and, eventually, the modern State of Israel. The Scofield Bible sold millions of copies, shaped generations of pastors and laypeople, and helped transform dispensational premillennialism from a minority view into a dominant force in American fundamentalism. It provided the theological scaffolding for later popularizers like Hal Lindsey and the Left Behind series, making Christian Zionism a mass phenomenon.
Intersection with Jewish Zionism: Herzl, Balfour, and Beyond
Christian restorationists offered crucial early support to Theodor Herzl. Anglican chaplain William Hechler, author of The Restoration of the Jews to Palestine According to Prophecy (1882), became Herzl’s key ally, arranging diplomatic meetings and viewing Zionism as biblical prophecy unfolding.
Christian Zionist influence peaked with the 1917 Balfour Declaration, backed by Prime Minister David Lloyd George and Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour, both shaped by biblical education. The Declaration’s pledge of a “national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine reflected centuries of British restorationist sentiment alongside Jewish lobbying. After Israel’s founding in 1948—and especially after the 1967 Six-Day War—American evangelical support deepened, aligning with Israeli security interests under a shared “Judeo-Christian” banner, despite underlying theological tensions.
In summary, Zionism as an ideology was first developed and promoted within Christian restorationist circles. It was later adopted by secular Jewish intellectuals and eventually harnessed by broader Jewish leadership as a solution to the “Jewish Question,” particularly after World War II. Christian Zionism provided essential theological legitimacy and political momentum.
A Theological Critique: Judaization and Carnalization
Christian Zionist millennialism represents a Judaized, materialist interpretation of Scripture. It fulfills Jewish hopes for an earthly messianic kingdom rather than Christ’s spiritual one. This eschatology de-spiritualizes Christianity, regressing to the national, earthly expectations that Jesus superseded.
The New Testament spiritualizes Old Testament promises: the land expands to the whole earth or new creation; the temple becomes the Church or the believer; Jerusalem becomes the heavenly Jerusalem (Galatians 4:26; Hebrews 12:22; Revelation 21). Jesus declared His kingdom “not of this world” (John 18:36) and taught worship in spirit and truth (John 4:21-24). Paul and Hebrews treat the old covenant, including the land, as temporary and fulfilled in Christ.
From the amillennial or supersessionist perspective—shared by much of historic Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy, and many Reformed traditions—a literal earthly millennial kingdom centered on national Israel appears as a “Judaization” or “carnalization” of the gospel. Augustine and others read the Revelation 20 millennium as the current Church age. The true hope lies in the new heavens and new earth, not a revived version of the old order.
Christian Zionists counter that theirs is the view that takes God’s Word literally. Yet this misses how Christ transcended and fulfilled the old promises with something far greater. This history and critique deserve careful consideration. Christian Zionism is not merely politics—it is doctrine with profound implications for how we read Scripture and understand God’s plan for humanity.