Iran: The religious right's apocalyptic handmaiden
On Mar. 11, Pastor John Hagee, the founder of Christians United for Israel, received a rousing reception at the opening dinner plenary of the annual American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) conference.
Hagee warned the crowd that "Iran poses a nuclear threat to the state of Israel that promises nothing less than a nuclear Holocaust." Hagee claimed that the situation is like 1938, only "Iran is Germany and [President Mahmoud] Ahmedinejad is the new Hitler."
Hagee added: "We must stop Iran's nuclear threat and stop it now and stand boldly [with] Israel, the only democracy in the Middle East."
A few weeks earlier, Hagee had met with Senator John McCain, a leading contender for the Republican Party's 2008 presidential nomination. Hagee has been leading the charge of conservative Christian evangelicals urging President Bush to deal more forcefully with Iran.
"Hagee's appearance at AIPAC indicates the growing organizational strength of the Christian Zionist lobby for apocalyptic war and the rise of corresponding Jewish factions both within AIPAC and within Israeli politics that are pushing for dramatically expanded war in the Mideast," said Bruce Wilson, the cofounder of Talk To Action, a website specializing on religion and politics.
As the launching of the Iraq War approaches its fourth anniversary, it is worth remembering that during the lead-up to the invasion, a number of conservative evangelicals voiced their support for the war.
Richard Land, president of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission for the Southern Baptist Convention, the nation's largest Protestant denomination, maintained that Bush's action met criteria for a just war. The National Association of Evangelicals, which represents several dozen denominations encompassing more than 30 million US evangelical Christians, openly supported the war. And Mike Evans, who heads the aggressively pro-Israeli Jerusalem Prayer Team, pointed out that war with Iraq could be a "dress rehearsal for Armageddon," the fulfillment of Biblical prophecy.
These days, while the Bush administration and beltway neoconservatives doggedly crank up the volume against Iran, they are again being joined by a number of significant conservative Christian evangelicals.
Hagee, pastor of the 18,000-member San Antonio, TX-based Cornerstone Church and head of a multimillion-dollar evangelical enterprise, "seems to believe such a conflict is both inevitable and necessary," The Jewish Week noted in early March.
Founder of Christians United for Israel (CUFI), a Christian Zionist lobbying group created last year, Hagee is also the author of a number of Christian-themed novels, as well as the recent Jerusalem Countdown: A Warning to the World, which maintains that biblical prophecy is currently playing itself out in the Middle East.
"The end of the world as we know it is rapidly approaching," Hagee wrote in Jerusalem Countdown. "Just before us is a nuclear countdown with Iran followed by Ezekiel's war (as described in Ezekiel, chapters 38 and 39), and then the final battle–the battle of Armageddon."
In a recent series of articles focused on Hagee, Talk to Action's Bruce Wilson described him as someone that "has built a career on aggressive support for hard-right to fringe-right Israeli politics and is now making inroads towards convincing the mainstream American Jewish community that he and CUFI are the best tactical allies Jews and Israel can expect to find."
"Pastor John Hagee's warmly received AIPAC speech illustrates the extent to which political leaders who espouse ideology that in the 1960s was considered to be scandalously close to the extreme end of the political spectrum can now expect to broadcast their views from a national stage," Wilson said.
Joel Rosenberg is another conservative Christian evangelical advocating some type of military action against Iran. In late February, Rosenberg, who was raised in an Orthodox Jewish family, reported on his website that a number of conservative Christian evangelical leaders were beginning to show an interest in Iran, particularly as the situation in the Middle East relates to passages in the Bible.
Rosenberg's latest novel, The Ezekiel Option, is "about the threat of a Russian-Iranian alliance to destroy Israel based on the Biblical prophecies found in the Book of Ezekiel, chapters 38 and 39."
These prophecies "describe what Bible scholars call the war of Gog and Magog. Russia and Iran form a military alliance with Lebanon, Syria and a group of other Middle East countries to destroy Israel in what Ezekiel described as the last days."
In January, during a trip to the Middle East, Rosenberg said that he "brief[ed] several hundred Arab and Iranian pastors and evangelical leaders on the latest geopolitical developments in the region," and that he taught "on Ezekiel 38 and 39... prophecies that most Christian leaders in the region are unfamiliar with."
Back home, Rosenberg has discovered a growing interest in developments in Iran amongst prominent evangelical Christian leaders. While flying to New Mexico, he "happened to sit next to" Focus on the Family founder Dr. James Dobson, one of the most politically powerful conservative evangelical leaders in the US.
Dobson, who "had been in Washington for meetings with high-level administration officials to discuss Iran, Iraq and the latest developments in the Middle East," told Rosenberg that he was becoming more "concerned about the Iranian nuclear threat, and has been studying Ezekiel's prophecies."
"Will there be a war in the region this year or next?" While acknowledging that "it's too early to say," Rosenberg claimed that 2007 is "the Year of Decision." President Bush and Congressional leaders "will need to decide soon just how they're going to handle the Iranian nuclear threat, [and] Church leaders also need to decide just how they are going to handle the Iranian threat, as well... after all, time is short, and the stakes are high."
Last July, at CUFI's coming out party in Washington, Hagee stated that "The United States must join Israel in a preemptive military strike against Iran to fulfill God's plan for both Israel and the West... a biblically prophesied end-time confrontation with Iran, which will lead to the Rapture, Tribulation… and [the] Second Coming of Christ."
In a statement given to IPS by Jane Hunter and Rabbi Haim Dov Beliak, cofounders of the website JewsOnFirst.org, they said that "Hagee's call in his speech for victory for Israel and America (which appears to refer to Iran) is not necessarily the call for military victory which his audience might have heard (a chilling prospect nonetheless). Hagee's 'victory' is coded language for Armageddon, which Christian Zionists see as the end-times battles set in Israel, when Christians are raptured to heaven and Jews lose–unless they're happy to convert."
If Bush unleashes a preemptive military strike against Iran, there is little doubt that Hagee will be by his side.