Ugandan pastor treated at Israeli hospital after attack

JERUSALEM (JTA) – An evangelical pastor from Uganda who recently began preaching support for Israel, is being treated in an Israeli hospital after an acid attack.

Pastor Umar Mulinde, 38, arrived in Israel on Jan. 5 for emergency medical treatment at Tel Aviv’s Sheba Medical Center following an acid attack that severely burned his face and torso and damaged his right eye.

The attackers shouted “Allah Akbar” (God is great) after pouring acid on Mulinde on Dec. 24 in Kampala. Mulinde converted to Christianity after spending much of his life as a Muslim.

Read full article here

Jonathan Romain on Yeshua’s fulfilled prophecy

Jonathan Romain is a rabbi whom I greatly respect. He wrote an article in the Guardian in 2010 asking whether Jews For Jesus leader Moishe Rosen died as a Jew or a Christian. The obvious question immediately, is whether “Jew” and “Christian” are contradictory terms.

If a Jew is someone whose mother is Jewish, then regardless of whether that Jew has beliefs widely seen as heretical, he is still a Jew. A Christian is anyone from any background or race, Jew or Gentile, who believes that Yeshua of Nazareth is the Christ or Messiah.

Here is Romain on Rosen’s apparent “crime” (he hesitates to use the word “sin”!):

His “crime” was not that he attempted to convert Jews to Christianity – the church had been doing that for centuries – but that he added a new and subversive element to the missionary campaign by asserting that those who did so were not reneging on their Jewishness but fulfilling it.

It meant that he removed one of the great barriers to any Jewish individual contemplating conversion – guilt at denying their roots and rejecting their family. He claimed that they could remain Jews, and even become better Jews, by accepting Jesus as the messiah.

Rosen’s message was given added potency by the fact that he himself had been an Orthodox Jew, and he could speak from personal experience. He sought to negate the position assumed up till that point by both the Jewish and Christian hierarchy that one had a choice between either Judaism or Christianity. Instead, said Rosen, a person could be both.

Now I would say that it is slightly revisionist, to imagine there was no-one before Moishe Rosen challenging the barriers of Jewish and Christian identity.

We have the likes of Paul Philip Levertoff and Isaac Liechtenstein, long before Rosen challenging traditional assumptions. Levertoff even wrote a book Love and the Messianic Age bringing together ideas about the divine love, from the Chabad tradition and from the gospel of John, amongst other fascinating writings.

Before these of course, we could look back to Paul himself, who worshipped in the Temple in Jerusalem for over a decade after his initial experience of believing in Yeshua, and openly, gladly identified as a Pharisaic Jew with Roman citizenship.

In Romain’s mind, however, Paul’s Jewish identity never, ever features relevantly in Christianity:

It was this blurring of the differences between the faiths that so enraged Jewish authorities. Ever since Christianity had begun, it had been recognised that although there was much in common between the two faiths – notably a shared system of ethics based on the teachings of the Old Testament/Hebrew Bible – there had been one crystal clear division: acceptance or rejection of Jesus. By calling his new movement “Jews for Jesus”, Rosen undermined that distinction.

In his introduction, Romain describes Rosen as a “hate figure”, writing:

The death of an extraordinary hate-figure has just occurred. Moishe Rosen was one of the most detested figures in recent decades in some Jewish circles – for religious reasons rather than for murderous policies.

Here is Romain’s explanation of said hatred:

What infuriates many, though, is that its adherents still maintain Jewish customs such as observing dietary laws and Jewish festivals as part of their claim to Jewish authenticity

If taken at face value, this means that if Messianic Jews wish to have a Shabbat meal in peace and quiet, we are justifying our relatives or neighbours hating us. Anyone who thinks this is okay, just take a step back and see how it sounds!

Moreover, Romain writes about Rosen as if he represents all Messianic Jews. But this is another case of writers confusing the missionary institution Jews For Jesus with the socio-religious group known as Messianic Jews.

Having dealt inadequately with the Jewishness of Messianic Jews, Romain then gets into the question of Jesus’ Messiahship.

There is an admission of the fact that Jesus has fulfilled many Biblical prophecies:

Rosen may have died, but the challenge he posed still looms large : can a Jew who accepts Jesus still claim to be a Jew? This raises the question of why most Jews do not follow Jesus despite the apparent way in which he is claimed to have fulfilled various biblical prophecies.

Here is Romain’s response:

The answer is that, like statistics, biblical verses can be manipulated to suit one’s own purposes, but they are not enough by themselves. Many people, for instance, have been born in Bethlehem (Micah 5.1) or have ridden into Jerusalem on a donkey (Zechariah 9.9) but that did not mean they were the messiah.

Notice something very subtle here?

Romain admits that Jesus has fulfilled prophecy, but the prophecy he concedes as having been fulfilled, is prophecy regarding superficial details of Jesus’ ministry. By “superficial”, I mean, details which can be seen and appear mundane, and do not seem particularly remarkable.

I agree that it’s not so impressive to ride into Jerusalem in a donkey or be born in Bethlehem. But by only partially quoting these verses, Romain underwrites their power. Zechariah 9.9 states that:

Rejoice greatly, O daughter Zion!
Shout aloud, O daughter Jerusalem!
Lo, your king comes to you;
triumphant and victorious is he,
humble and riding on a donkey,
on a colt, the foal of a donkey.

This king is humble, like Jesus, and so to accept that the Messiah will ride into Jerusalem on a donkey, we must also accept that the Messiah does so humbly. Jesus’ humble first coming, and his special love for the meek, should make the light bulbs flash in one’s mind, that his riding humbly on a donkey into Jerusalem is more powerful than it initially seems.

And then, we have the verse in Micah that Rabbi Romain highlights:

But you, O Bethlehem Ephrathah, who are too little to be among the clans of Judah, from you shall come forth for me one who is to be ruler in Israel, whose coming forth is from of old, from ancient days.

It is not just that the Messiah, the ruler of Israel, is to be King of Israel. Rather, the Messiah’s coming is from “ancient days”. The Hebrew phrase is מִימֵ֥י עוֹלָֽםfrom the days of eternity.

עוֹלָֽם (olam) is frequently used in Hebrew to describe the eternal – the Shema ends with the phrase le’olam va’ed - for ever and ever. לְעוֹלָ֔ם clearly means “forever” in the Bible  -  מִימֵ֥י עוֹלָֽם is “from the days of forever“.

So if Rabbi Romain sees the prophecy of the Messiah being born in Bethlehem as unimpressive, then surely with that prophecy is the concept of Messiah being from the days of eternity – something he could only accomplish were he divine.

Yet this exploration of the text, is lost amongst Romain’s rhetorical devices.

We could also note how Romain has not looked at the more obviously shocking passages like Psalm 22 or Isaiah 53, whose parallels with the death of Yeshua are unavoidable. The life and identity of Yeshua breathes palpably through these verses.

Romain justifies his position that Jesus is not the Messiah, thus:

For Judaism, the litmus test for that title is that on his arrival, peace will descend on the world and a time of universal harmony begin. That is why many Jews prefer to talk about the messianic age, rather than the messiah, emphasising that what is crucial is the era not the person. Peace has not happened and so Jesus failed the test. He was clearly an inspirational preacher, but not the messiah.

According to Romain, Jews care more about the messianic age of peace, than the identity and ministry of Messiah himself. Yet most Jews throughout the ages have believed in a Messiah figure – indeed, entire revolts, cults, and mass-movements have originated out of community belief in Jewish personalities as the Messiah. I think in particular of Shimon bar Kochba and Shabbatei Zevi.

Romain concludes:

Of course, Jews for Jesus insist otherwise, and that it is possible to inhabit two religious worlds simultaneously; but for most other Jews, they have crossed a line that makes them good Christians but no longer Jewish.

For Romain, to believe in a Messiah personality who has not brought world peace, makes you not Jewish any more. I find it hard to believe what Romain is saying.

50% of Jewish institutions in the UK are controlled by Chabad, along with half of British rabbis.

According to Romain’s logic, half of Britain’s rabbis are not Jewish, because they believe in a messiah who did not bring world peace before his death – he died, and these Jews carry on believing he is the Messiah – still keeping the Torah.

If Romain were to write about Chabad in the Guardian:

What infuriates many, though, is that its adherents still maintain Jewish customs such as observing dietary laws and Jewish festivals as part of their claim to Jewish authenticity

Well, you can guarantee there would be uproar!

Christ at the Checkpoint 2012, Dr Jim West & pro-Nazi theology

Meet Dr Jim West, Adjunct Professor of Biblical Studies at the Quartz Hill School of Theology and Pastor of Petros Baptist Church, Petros, Tennessee:

He is supportive of the Christ at the Checkpoint 2012 conference, which is likely to be full of antisemitism, racism and replacement theology. He is also a fan of Stephen Sizer.

Christ at the Checkpoint 2012 will be hosted by Bethlehem Bible College. Raed Salah supporters Stephen Sizer and Ben White are due to speak there. Sizer is listed as an organiser.

Bethlehem Bible College has a worrying track record on antisemitism. They sent lecturer Alex Awad to represent the college, and share a platform with Hitler-admirer and Holocaust denier Frederick Tobin in Indonesia. Stephen Sizer also attended this conference in Indonesia, as did Iranian Holocaust denier and Faurisson admirer Jawad Shabarf.

Christ at the Checkpoint 2012 has a Facebook page and a Twitter page.

Here is what CATC tweeted recently:

A blog post from @drjewest on why he’s supporting the Christ at the Checkpoint 2012 conference http://wp.me/pLvic-a6q

Christ at the Checkpoint 2012 also issues a request for its supporters to follow Dr West on Twitter.

Dr West’s blog post accuses Christian Zionists of being heretics. Dr West has previously written that Jews and Christian Zionists are co-conspiring to produce “the sickest sorts of behaviors” in Israel.On Israel selling arms to Argentina during the Falklands, he wrote:

If hatred of Jews is antisemitism, Jewish hatred of Brits must be antibriticism. I wonder how many antibritites there are in Israel. [...] It’s high time for Jews the world over to denounce antibriticism. That sort of ethnic hatred is intolerable in today’s world. It has no place here among the decent.

You can see already, why Christ at the Checkpoint organisers are interested in his writings. But there’s more. Here is Dr West on Martin Luther. Whilst he appears to denounce the work in his first paragraph, West then reveals his hand:

Luther didn’t hate the Jews- even when he wrote his tirade.  He hated falsehood. And he hated falsehood whether it was found in Rome or Wittenberg. Those poorly informed historical ignoramuses who repeatedly denounce Luther as an anti-semite are simply wrong.  They know nothing of Luther nor anything of the history of the Church.  All they know is their own biases and prejudices.

Here are some excerpts from Luther’s tirade against the Jews, On the Jews and their Lies:

Continue reading

Simon Wiesenthal Center denounces Christ at the Checkpoint 2012

The dean and director of interfaith relations at the Simon Wiesenthal Center writes for the Jerusalem Post today:

One of the most troubling purveyors of this stealth theo-terrorism lies within sight of Jerusalem. In 2010, Palestinian Christians convened the Christ at the Checkpoint (CATC) conference under the aegis of the Bethlehem Bible College, aimed specifically at Evangelicals. CATC repudiated Christian Zionism as a false teaching, an erroneous misreading and manipulation of Scripture.

One of the architects was Anglican vicar Stephen Sizer, who denies that he is an anti-Semite but hangs out with Holocaust revisionists and whose trip to Tehran included a defense of Ahmadinejad’s Holocaust denial. Other CATC participants, however, came from churches and schools completely identified with the traditional Evangelical mainstream.

Evangelicals who came with an open-minded commitment to hear both sides heard Mitri Raheb, a pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Christmas Church in Bethlehem deny the connection between modern Jews and those of the Bible.

“I’m sure if we were to do a DNA test between David… and Jesus… and Mitri, born just across the street from where Jesus was born, I’m sure the DNA will show that there is a trace. While, if you put King David, Jesus and Netanyahu, you will get nothing, because Netanyahu comes from an East European tribe who converted to Judaism in the Middle Ages…. I always loved to say that most probably one of my grand, grand, grand, grandmas used to babysit for Jesus.”

No one stormed out in protest. Rather to the contrary: Some participants, like Lynne Hybels (who is married to the head of the Willow Creek network of 13,000 Evangelical congregations), returned to the US as committed workers for the Palestinian cause.

THE LIST of 2012 CATC conference participants includes names of those who used to be firm and unequivocal supporters of Israel. Among the scheduled speakers is the president of the World Evangelical Alliance, Sang-Bok David Kim. The WEA is the parent group of the National Association of Evangelicals, the largest Evangelical network in the US.

The “affirmations” representing the beliefs of the organizers have already been published. They include the supplanting of Christian Zionism with a supersessionist understanding of Scripture that leaves no room for Jews. In other words, all Scriptural covenants with the Jewish people, as well as its religious dignity, have been replaced and abrogated.

While most Christians have always believed that the New Testament fulfilled the Hebrew Scripture, many Evangelicals found room for a continued relationship between Jews, Divine promises, and even the physical Land of Israel.

With no one apparently noticing, that nuance is being deleted.

Another affirmation deals with Jewish Zionism.

“Modern Zionism is a political movement created to meet the aspirations of Jews around the world who longed for a homeland,” it begins, quickly growing ugly: “It has become ethnocentric, privileging one people at the expense of others.”

So, Zionism wasn’t always equal to racism, but it is today, according to CATC’s organizers. The UN’s debunked “Zionism is Racism” has been reborn in theological garb, absorbed and preached by some who a few years ago were among Israel’s greatest allies.

Read it all.

I should say, pace the writer of this piece, I support “the Palestinian cause” in seeking a homeland with borders, and a national identity – peaceful and side-by-side with Israel.

On the topic of interfaith, I do think the author could have mentioned the fact that,  unfortunately, three leaders from the Messianic movement - Richard HarveyEvan Thomas andWayne Hilsden - are booked as speakers at Christ at the Checkpoint 2012.

As I wrote in the Huffington Post:

Many Jews who make a personal decision to believe in Christ, also known as Messianic Jews, now feel very vulnerable because of this conference. Indeed, most Messianic Jews are hugely disappointed that the Checkpoint conference will take place with the blessing of the wider church. We feel let down by many institutions within Christianity, and we are sure they can do more to eliminate antisemitism in Christian theology.

Their participation in Checkpoint 2012 is a scandal, and one that deserves exposure before the wider Jewish community.

Jewish Chronicle column calls out Christ at the Checkpoint speaker Ben White on understanding racism

Adam Levick writes in the Jewish Chronicle:

One of the most prevalent axioms advanced by anti-Zionists is that Jews attempt to stifle criticism of Israel by accusing their opponents of antisemitism.

Indeed, Guardian readers’ editor Chris Elliott wrote last weekend: “The Guardian is seen as… especially critical of the Israeli government”, which “has led to complaints that it is carrying material that… lapses into language resonant of antisemitism or is antisemitic.”

In fact, the pro-Israel community doesn’t argue that disproportionate criticism of Israel is, in itself, evidence of antisemitism.

The most dangerous dynamic at the Guardian is the licensing of commentators with an apparent record of antisemitism, while justifying their politics as merely anti-Zionism or pro-Palestinian.

For instance, Ben White, published regularly at CiF, has explained that he can understand why some people are antisemites, due in part to “widespread…subservience to the Israeli cause in the… media”.

Read the rest here.

Conservative MP slams Christ at the Checkpoint speaker Ben White for his extremism

The Jewish Chronicle reports:

Conservative MP Louise Mensch said she was proud to speak at a Jewish student conference despite criticism from anti-Israel bloggers.

Mrs Mensch was guest speaker at Sunday’s Stand With Us – Israel in Focus conference. Before her speech, she was attacked in a post on the website of the Liberal Conspiracy magazine.

Anti-Israel activist Ben White wrote that her appearance at the event was “troubling” and accused Stand With Us of adopting “extreme positions and working with disturbing allies”.

He concluded: “Should an MP be giving them support?”

But Mrs Mensch hit back on social networking site Twitter, criticising the magazine’s editor, Sunny Hundal, for supporting Mr White. She highlighted Mr White’s defence of a German politician who compared Israel to Nazi Germany and a 2002 article in which he wrote “I do not consider myself an antisemite, yet I can also understand why some are”.

She told Mr Hundal: “You really should be ashamed of yourself, and your blog, for hosting a man with such repellent views.”

At the conference, Mrs Mensch, MP for Corby and East Northamptonshire, cried as she recalled the Itamar terror attack earlier this year. Her criticism of the BBC’s reporting of the murders of the Fogel family was widely praised by the Jewish community.

She said the conference had been “very moving” and she was glad to see Christians and Muslims attending alongside Jewish students.

Israeli ambassador to Britain, Daniel Taub, opened the event, praising Stand With Us for its work on British campuses.

The conference included lectures and workshops on countering boycotts of Israel, and a panel debate between JSoc members and Hasan Afzal of the British Muslims for Israel group.

Stephen Sizer on his links with Iran’s Khomeinists: “I’ll go anywhere to share the gospel”

Last night, I attended a debate between the Reverend Dr. Stephen Sizer PhD, Vicar of Christ Church Virginia Water, and the theologian Calvin Smith. Sizer and Smith were present to discuss the theological topic, “Has the Church replaced Israel?”

Calvin Smith ably challenged Sizer’s understandings of covenants in the Hebrew Bible, and the way he applies this to Middle Eastern politics. When Smith pressed Sizer on his theology about Jewish exile in the Bible, Sizer replied to Smith:

“I fear we are heading for an exile – not a restoration – from the land – based on the actions of the Israeli government.”

Whilst various theological issues were discussed, I do not believe that Sizer’s theology can somehow be separated from his questionable activities, allying himself with extremists of various shades, including Malaysian racists and parts of the American and global Far Right.

Yet it became apparent throughout the course of the debate, that Sizer had set limits upon what could or could not be discussed. Racism, antisemitism and politics appeared to be off-limits.

Debating with Stephen Sizer about theology, is rather akin to a debate with Nick Griffin about immigration, in which you are not allowed to talk about his views on black people.

I said this to the organisers of the debate. They acknowledged that next time, should Sizer choose to return, it would be good to have an open debate on racism and antisemitism with him.

Still, Calvin Smith very wisely challenged Sizer on his questionable relationship with the Iranian regime.

When Smith asked Sizer whether he accepted the fact, that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had threatened the existence of the Jewish state, Sizer admitted that:

“Ahmadinejad has made provocative statements along those lines.”

This raises the question – if Sizer recognises Ahmadinejad’s antisemitism, then why did he go to Iran for a joint political project, against Christian Zionism?

Smith also asked Sizer directly, why he went to Iran.

Here is Sizer’s response:

“I’ll go anywhere to share the gospel”.

Did Sizer go to Iran, to share the gospel?

Continue reading

Calling all Messianics: Enter This Blogging Contest!

This is cross-posted from Christ At the Checkpoint

blog contest logo

If you’re a blogger and you would like to help us get the word out about the 2012 Christ at the Checkpoint Conference, you could win one of several great prizes that we’re offering to our blogging friends.

All you have to do to enter our blogging contest is write a blog post about the conference and send us the URL. It’s that easy!

The topic is up to you. All we ask is that somewhere in your blog post you link to the conference website and mention the blogging contest.

You might tell your audience about why you think the conference is important, share some thoughts about the conference themes, relate a personal experience that connects to the conference, etc.  Get creative—it’s up to you!

We’ll choose one blogger at random to receive a choice of the following prizes:

1.  A VIP Press Pass to the conference that includes free access to all conference events, special access to conference speakers, and a personal tour of the Bethlehem area with a local conference organizer.

2.  A collection of resources on the conference topics including:

  • With God On Our Side (DVD)
  • Little Town of Bethlehem (DVD)
  • Palestinian Memories by Alex Awad (Book)
  • Zion’s Christian Soldiers? by Stephen Sizer (Book)
  • Seeking and Pursuing Peace by Salim Munayer (Book)
  • Light Force by Brother Andrew and Al Janssen (Book)
  • Whose Promised Land? by Colin Chapman (Book)
  • Whose Land? Whose Promise? by Gary Burge (Book)
  • Choose Love Not Power by Tony Campolo (Book)
  • The Irresistible Revolution by Shane Claiborne (Book)
  • Israeli Apartheid: A Beginner’s Guide by Ben White (Book)
  • Social Justice Handbook: Small Steps for a Better World by Mae Canon (Book)
  • I am Not a Social Activist: Making Jesus the Agenda by Ron Sider (Book)
  • Palestinians in Israel: Segregation, Discrimination and Democracy by Ben White (Book)

3.  An iPod Touch

The deadline for submissions is December 2 and the winner will be notified later in December.

Please send your blog post URL to  admin@christatthecheckpoint.com

We’re looking forward to hearing from you!

Note: The conference organizing committee reserves the right to restrict eligible contest entries based on content that is in line with the conference goals.

Antisemitism and Christ at the Checkpoint 2012

I have compiled a report, on antisemitism and the Christ at the Checkpoint conference.

You may download this document  here:

Antisemitism and Christ At The Checkpoint 2012.

At the last Checkpoint conference, one speaker – antizionist theologian and admirer of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, Colin Chapman –  argued that:

“[T]he bad experience of Palestinian Muslims with Zionist immigrants after 1880 has reminded them of Muhammad‟s bad experience with the Jews of Medina, encouraging them to apply the harsh verses about Jews in the Qur‟an to Israeli Jews today. It must seem to Palestinian Muslims as if Jews of the modern period were simply repeating the hostile behaviour of Jews many centuries earlier towards the Prophet.”

Thanks Rabbi Kravitz – Don’t be fooled by David Herzog!

Jewish for Judaism’s Rabbi Kravitz has at least got it right for once in highlighting the unethical tactics of tele-evangelist and fake healer David Herzog.

David Herzog will feature next month on Jonathan Bernis’ Jewish Voice Ministries show. They present him as a Messianic Jew.

Herzog is also featured on Sid Roth’s circus It’s Supernatural show:

His so-called miracles include things such as instant weight loss and teeth fillings turning gold. Sid Roth is a sham and a shame to the Messianic Movement. David Herzog is a shame to the world of Christian mission. Such methodology as used by Herzog is immoral deception, Rabbi Kravitz is right and we welcome his exposing of this charlatan.

Evangelical missionary David Herzog stooped to a new low deceiving the Jewish community with ads which intentionally avoided any mention of their Christian evangelical agenda.

The half-page ads ran for several weeks in the Los Angeles Jewish Journal. They promoted a Beverly Hills event offering “supernatural healings” based on what the ad termed Jewish mysticism.

The ads were devoid of any phone number or website that would have facilitated an easy investigation into the true nature of the program.

It turns out Herzog’s duplicity was intentional. He writes on the “In Jesus” website that “due to the highly sensitive nature of these 100% evangelistic meetings dubbed as lectures to the Jewish community we cannot give out the location or details.”

A number of Jewish students attended the recent event, only to discover they had been duped by the Herzog ads.

As the founder and director of Jews for Judaism, I know this is not the first time a community newspaper has been the target of such duplicity. A number of years ago we alerted the community that ads for the missionary movie “The Rabbi” were surreptitiously placed in dozens of Jewish newspapers across North American.

Once the Jewish Journal realized Herzog’s true intentions, it refused to accept any more of his ads.

Herzog has appeared on many of the growing number of messianic television shows. He is part of a long line of Christian faith healers running revival meetings. However, in his case, Herzog has a Jewish name and he gloats at his success at conducting major “Jewish Outreach” on the East Coast, West Coast and Israel.

“Even the Jewish newspapers are begging us to put our ads in their next Health Issue,” he wrote online.

In a pitch to solicit donations, Herzog claims his historic outreach meetings will be, “packed with unsaved Jewish people wide open to the gospel presented with healings and miracles.”

Speaking of past meetings Herzog claims, “miracles broke out, many were healed, and American and Israeli Jews received salvation after God powerfully healed them.”

Although missionaries are less visible on street corners, the Herzog episode demonstrates that attempts to convert Jews have not diminished.  They have simply implemented new tactics and taken advantage of the Internet to reach unsuspecting students and young adults often within the comfort of their homes and dormitory rooms.

As a community we must remain vigilant and increase our positive educational and spiritual promotion of Judaism. Additionally, missionary claims must be continuously refuted and individuals must be taught to think critically to avoid being fooled and taken advantage of.

Jews for Judaism is already planning a campaign to prepare the community for a Chosen People Ministries crusade scheduled to target the Los Angeles Jewish community in 2012.  This time we have enough notice to plan in advance, and it is imperative that the entire community rally together and join us in presenting a strong front.

Rabbi Bentzion Kravitz is the founder and director of Jews for Judaism. source