Does Anybody Care About the Christian Arabs?
by
Bill Barnwell
by Bill Barnwell
DIGG THIS
In the bloody
and hate-fueled battles throughout the Middle East there is a forgotten
group of people. This forgotten group of people is ignored even
by many of their own brethren across the world. I’m referring, of
course, to Arab Christians.
This unfortunate
group of people is caught in the middle of tensions between Jews
and Muslims. While many Christian Arabs sympathize politically and
culturally with their fellow Arabs over the Jewish people, they
nonetheless are often targets of scorn from Arab Muslims. What is
most shocking, however, is that Christians of Arab descent are non-issues
in the minds of most Western Christians. Arab believers are most
notably ignored by many Christians in America who believe fervently
in the dispensational, pre-tribulational, premillennial view of
Bible prophecy.
Considering
that dispensationalist Christians are so focused on events in the
Middle East, why then would they have a lack of interest in Arab
believers? Because in their prophetic paradigm, it all boils down
to the secular nation of Israel. Dispensationalists believe that
God made promises in the Old Testament to the nation of Israel that
have not been completely fulfilled. This is one of the main reasons
why dispensationalist Christians are such strong supporters of Israel
and why they do not believe any part of ancient Israel should be
in the hands of Arabs. To have anyone other than Jewish people in
possession of the disputed territories would constitute rebellion
against God. The reasoning also goes that God made a promise to
ancient Israel, and God never breaks a promise. Since He still hasn’t
fulfilled all the land promises to Israel, it must then be forthcoming.
The problem
with this is that it ignores some key passages which indicate that
God did in fact already honor His land promises to ancient Israel.
The book of Joshua details Israel’s possession of the Promised Land.
From Joshua 13:8–21:42 there is a very long and seemingly dull section
for modern readers about the ancient tribes of Israel receiving
their sections of the Promised Land. After this section there is
a summary in the next verses which reads:
So the
Lord gave Israel all the land he had sworn to give their forefathers,
and they took possession of it and settled there. The Lord gave
them rest on every side just as he had sworn to their forefathers.
Not one of their enemies withstood them; the Lord handed all their
enemies over to them. Not one of all the Lord’s good promises
to the house of Israel failed, every one was fulfilled (Joshua
21:43–45 emphasis mine).
Some dispensationalists
have tried to evade the force of these verses and claim that the
land promises really weren’t fulfilled completely, but their objections
fall
short of the kind of "literal interpretation" they claim
to champion and consistently apply.
The New Testament
does not focus on race, gender, or class distinctions. In fact,
it says such distinctions are done away with in Christ. The "seed
of Abraham" is not determined by race, but by faith (Galatians
3:28–29). Likewise, the New
Testament says nothing about "rebuilding the Temple."
Where the Old Testament talks about rebuilding the Temple it is
referring to the Second Jewish Temple that already was rebuilt and
was subsequently destroyed by the Romans in 70AD. In the New Testament,
the Temple is oftentimes refigured to mean either Christ Himself,
the Church, or the body of a believer (John 2:19; 1 Corinthians
3:16, 6:19; 2 Corinthians 6:16). The focus is no longer on a specific
area of land, but a faith that was to spread throughout the whole
world (Matt. 28:16–20; Acts 1:8). Where the New Testament does refer
to a plan for ethnic Israelites it is only in the context of them
being grafted into faith in Christ (Romans 9–11).
What then does
all this have to do with Christian Arabs? A great deal. Because
of the many theological misperceptions Christians have regarding
the "end-times" and "Bible prophecy," such as
the ones described above, Christian Arabs just don’t fit the bill
for being prophetically important people.
Thus, last
summer when Israel was bombing Lebanon, most Christians didn’t even
think how it might affect Lebanon’s fairly significant Christian
population. The focus was only on Israel and how this might relate
to the "rapture" or other end-times events.
To the dispensationalist
Christian, Christian Arabs who don’t enthusiastically support Israel
and Israeli foreign policy are actually thumbing their nose at God.
Such Western Christians think that it’s great that there are Christian
Arabs in the Middle East, but only to the extent that such believers
support Israel. Rather than showing concern or compassion for suffering
Arabs Christians who are caught in the crossfire between Jews and
Muslims, the majority of dispensationalist Christians instead show
them indifference at best or contempt at worst.
It does not
particularly bother Western dispensationalists that the population
of Christians in Israel and the disputed territories over the years
has dwindled to a great extent. It also apparently doesn’t bother
them that Christians are not free to evangelize in Israel. The main
issues that matter to such believers are issues that concern secular
Israel and their role in the "end-times." It’s quite a
shame, however, if
these beliefs about modern Israel and the end-times actually are
Biblically inaccurate. It’s an even bigger shame if Christian
Arabs are getting ignored because of them.
Of course,
there will be some who will cry "anti-Semitism." But anti-Semitism
is not the same thing as rejecting the sloppy interpretations of
Christian dispensationalists. It also not anti-Semitic to sympathize
with suffering Arab Christians whose plight is often ignored. Yes,
there is a real and very pervasive anti-Semitism out there and it
is ugly.
Neither racism
nor bad Biblical theology should drive our foreign policy. Some
of the same Christians who talk a good deal about spreading the
faith are indifferent to the faith’s disappearance in the birthplace
of Christianity and its surrounding regions. Many Western Christians
get excited about sending money to organizations that bring ethnic
Jews from Russia into Israel because they think in doing so they
will speed up the "rapture" or Second Coming. "You
can become a part of prophecy!" is the sales pitch. You won’t
find many of these same Christians, however, sending money to suffering
Christian Arabs in Israel, Lebanon or anywhere else in the Middle
East. Doing so wouldn’t fit their prophetic system.
Thankfully
the message of the Bible is that God does not show partiality based
on race or ethnicity (Galatians 3:28–29). Nor is it suggested anywhere
in the New Testament that God has "two separate prophetic plans
for Israel and the Church." The reality, however, is that many
Christians will not talk about Arab believers because they fear
being labeled anti-Semitic, fear incurring a curse from God, or
they just plain don’t care.
People’s
beliefs about the future impact the way they think or live in the
present. We all would be better off if we could correct misperceptions
about what the Bible says regarding the future. Just ask the struggling
Christians in the Middle East who are ignored by their fellow believers
in the Church.
April
17, 2007
Bill
Barnwell [send him mail]
is
a pastor and writer from Michigan. He holds both a Master of Ministry
degree and a Master of Arts in Theological Studies degree from Bethel
College in Mishawaka, Indiana. Visit his
blog. Bill is also a Mortgage
Consultant and Loan Originator who can serve clients
throughout the country.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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