Zionism,
simply put, is the Jewish people’s national liberation movement. Put in Biblical
terms, it is the return from exile of the Jews to Zion – to that very
special land pro-mised by God to the first Jew,
Abraham, and through his descendants, Isaac and Jacob, to the Jewish people
forever.
The
Hebrew Scriptures equate Zion
with the holiest city in Judaism, Israel’s
capital of Jerusalem.
You can read numerous references in the Bible and the Psalms to the word Zion, such as in Psalm 135:21,
II Samuel 5:7 and Isaiah 24:23.
The Biblical yearning
of the ancient Jews to return to their ancestral homeland is mirrored in the
modern political usage of the term Zionism, first employed in 1890 by the
Jewish author and poet, Nathan Birnbaum.
David Ben-Gurion, first Prime
Minister of Israel.
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Theodore Herzl, an
assimilated Jewish journalist from Vienna, became the father of
modern Zionism in the late nineteenth century. He had been so moved by the
hopelessness of the lives of the Jews in Europe, that he helped
create the political movement calling for the return of the Jews to the ancient
homeland, which resulted finally in the rebirth of Israel
in 1948. Herzl himself wrote in 1898. “One thing is to me certain, high above
any doubt: the movement will continue. I know not when I shall die, but Zionism
will never die.” Herzl died young, his heart unable to withstand his feverish
restlessness and the enormous strain he placed upon it.
But this article deals
with the Christians who found within their faith the Biblical signposts, which
showed them the imperative need to support the return of the Jews to ancient Zion and the Land of Israel. Who were some
of these Christians and what did they find in the Scriptures that moved them so
profoundly?
Perhaps the first
Christians to reject the belief … that the Church is the “new Israel”
and that Christians are the “new Jews” occurred some 400 years ago as a result
of the printing of the King James Version of the Bible. They realized that such
an old and pernicious belief held by the Church was the fuel that fed the fires
of the Catholic Inquisition and of the massacres of Jewish populations
throughout much of Europe
during the Crusades. That idea is known today primarily as “Replace-ment Theology” and is employed chiefly as a weapon against
the reconstitution of the Jewish State of Israel in its ancestral and Biblical
homeland.
In about 1560, Henry
Finch, an Englishman who was a jurist, legal writer, member of the British
Parliament and Hebraist, encouraged the Jews in Europe to assert their claim
to the Promised Land. He spoke and wrote in Hebrew but could not speak to Jews
directly for they had been driven out of England
in 1290 by Edward I, after the barons and the kings had repeatedly exploited,
impoverished and massacred them. It was not until 1657 that they were to return
during the time of Oliver Cromwell, who himself was moved to support the rights
of the Jews to live again in England
and to return to Zion.
Finch was moved by the
words of the Jewish prophet Isaiah, and particularly by Chapter 43:4-7 in which
the Lord God of Israel
declares that he will “bring back His people from the East, the West, the North
and the South.” Henry Finch was thus one of the early Christian Zionists. Many
Christians have been moved to embrace the return of the Jews to Eretz Yisrael, the Land of Israel, by what the
Jewish prophet Jeremiah wrote in chapter 31:10-12. “Hear the Word of the Lord,
O ye nations. Declare it and say, He that scattered Israel
will gather him: therefore, they shall come and sing again in the heights of Zion.”
In 1910, a young
British Army officer with the unlikely name, Richard Meinertzhagen,
was dining with the British Consul in Odessa when a pogrom broke
out in the streets outside. Meinertzhagen watched
with growing but impotent rage as Jewish shops and businesses erupted in flames
and Jewish men, women and children were hunted down, beaten, murdered and left
to lie in the gutter while the police stood by and watched. He wrote in his
journal, “I am deeply moved by these terrible deeds and have resolved that
whenever or where I can help the Jews, I shall do so to the best of my
ability.” Young Richard Meinertzhagen became a
lifelong Zionist and, though a nominal Christian, wrote that he was much
influenced by the “Divine Promise that the Holy Land will forever remain Israel’s
inheritance.”
Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen went on to become a great fighter for the
Zionist cause at a time when many members of the British Government and
military, such as Prime Ministers Lord Arthur Balfour and Lloyd George were
Christian Zionists.
Meinertzhagen,
perhaps, played an even more fundamental role in helping the British and Anzac
(Australian and New Zealand) forces defeat the Ottoman Turks than Colonel T. E.
Lawrence the famed Lawrence of Arabia – ever did. Meinertzhagen’s
espousal of the Jewish cause and of the rights of the Jews to return to their
homeland led him to visit Adolph Hitler and Joachim Von Ribbentrop
in Berlin
just three months before the Second World War began on September 3, 1939.
With a loaded revolver
in his pocket, he had gone to seek assurances from Hitler that the Jews of
Germany would be safeguarded. The fuehrer had thrown up his hand in the Nazi
salute and shouted “Heil Hitler.” Meinertzhagen,
thinking he was being polite, raised his own hand and replied, “Heil Meinertzhagen.” It was the
wrong thing to do and Hitler launched into a forty-minute tirade, translated by
Von Ribbentrop. Needless to say, Hitler did not give
the assurances that Richard Meinertzhagen sought and
to the end of his days Meinertzhagen regretted not
using the revolver. Indeed he wrote in his diary. “If the war breaks out, as I
feel sure it will, then I shall feel very much to blame for not killing these
two.”
There were many
Christians who were inspired by the Bible to become Zionists. In 1714, John Toland of Ireland, published his book, Reasons for
Naturalizing the Jews in Great Britain
and Ireland
on the Same Footing with all Other Nations. He knew about the appalling incarceration
of the Jews in ghettos throughout Europe
from which they could not escape. His work helped to finally allow the Jews in
1866 to enter Parliament, which led the most famous nineteenth century English
Jew, Benjamin Disraeli, to serve two terms as Prime Minister.
In Denmark,
Holeger Paulli (1644-1714)
published books and pamphlets, which he sent to the kings of France
and England
urging them to help fulfill the desire and yearnings of the Jews to return and
regain their statehood.
In the nineteenth
century there was a flowering of support by Christians for the Jewish yearning
to return home. The French author Emile Zola had been horrified and outraged at
the trumped up charges that led to the imprisonment on Devil’s Island of the Jewish Captain
Alfred Dreyfus. Such anti-Semitism as existed in the French officer corps led
Zola to publish his withering attack on the French army and on anti-Semitism in
his book J’Accuse. William Blake began the
first lines of one of his greatest poems, “England,
awake, awake, awake! Jerusalem thy sister
calls. Why wilt thou sleep the sleep of death, and close her from thy ancient
walls? Thy gates beheld sweet Zion’s ways: Then was a
time of joy and love.”
Lord Palmerston, British Foreign Secretary, wrote in 1840:
“There exists at the present time among the Jews dispersed over Europe a strong notion that
the time is approaching when their nation is to return to Palestine. It would be
of manifest importance to Turkey
to encourage the Jews to return and settle in Palestine… ”
Disraeli wrote some
years later, and well before Israel
was reborn as an independent State, that “A people that persists in celebrating
their vintage, although they have no fruits to gather, will regain their
vineyards.”
Leo Tolstoy, Gorky,
Rousseau, Sir Walter Scott, Longfellow, Walt Whitman, Mark Twain, Lord Shaftesbury, J.C. Smuts, Winston Churchill and hundreds and
thousands of other Christians found the same signposts in the Bible, which led
them to support the Zionist cause and the redemption of Israel.
In the United States,
President Abraham Lincoln overruled some of the anti-Jewish sentiments of
General Ulysses S. Grant. President Woodrow Wilson was in favor of the Zionist
ideal and President Harry Truman described himself as the “modern day Cyrus”
because he had refused to accept the State Department’s preference not to
recognize the independence of the newly reborn Jewish State in 1948. In doing
so, he repeated what his ancient Persian counterpart, King Cyrus, had done
millennia before in recognizing the Jewish people’s eternal attachment to its
ancestral homeland.
Today many millions of
Christians support Israel
even as it becomes increasingly isolated in a hostile world. Organizations such
as the International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem, Bridges for
Peace, Christians United for Israel (CUFI), and
The Jerusalem Connection International, among others, help refute the relentless
anti-Israel propaganda campaign against Israel
by its Arab and pro-Arab enemies. They educate their fellow Christians about Israel’s
cause, while at the same time providing material assistance and moral support
to the beleaguered citizens of the Jewish State.
The second President
of Israel, Yitzhak Ben-Zvi, was moved by the
fulfillment of the ancient prophecies and by the support of many Christian
supporters of Israel’s
rebirth. He commented as follows: “We are witnessing today the wondrous process
of the joining of the tribes of Israel,
bone to bone and flesh to flesh; the merging of them into one nation. I pray
that the Rock and Redeemer of Israel may prosper our ways and that in our days Judah
may be saved and Israel
dwell securely.”
Now in the first decade of the
21st century, the continued survival of the reconstituted Land of Israel is being
tested by an infernal coalition of enemies. Never has the blessed help and
support of individual Christians and Christian Zionist organizations been more
needed by the Zionist cause and by the embattled men, women and children of Israel.
And never has it been so appreciated by them as now when the world is turning
its cold face against Zion.
Copyright © Victor Sharpe 2009. Victor
Sharpe writes about Jewish history and the Israel-Islamist conflict. He is the
author of several books including: Politicide
– The attempted murder of the Jewish state. Both books available from
publisher (www.lulu.com)
This article is
reprinted from The Jerusalem Connection, PO Box 20295, Washington DC 20041. WWW.TJCI.ORG Subscriptions to this great full-color,
Christian Zionist magazine can be purchased for only $30 per year.