Robertson not a 'fringe' personality

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More on Pat Robertson.

The Southern Baptists, AFA's Don Wildmon and so on are "embarrassed" with his "idiotic public statements". Talk about the pots calling the kettle black... Well, he may be idiotic, but he does not speak for "an ever-diminishing number of American evangelicals" as these and other conservative Christian commentators are claiming.

Those on the religious right who distance themselves from him and say he doesn't represent their views are being disingenuous to say the least. What they dislike is not his opinions but how he delivers them. Their disagreement is not over substance, but style.

Robertson's great sin is his lack of civility and self-control, not his views (which they largely share in one form or another). He is holding the rest of them back by his buffoonery, making it more difficult for them to take control of the public square through calm, 'compassionate conservativism'. In reality, whatever their outward differences, they are all cut from the same ideological cloth.

Plenty of people watch Robertson's show, buy his books. Even more are influenced by or share his religious and political views, even if they won't say it outright.

"Among the elites in the movement, they're getting impatient with him and probably are past the point of being able to take him anymore," said Mark J. Rozell, a professor of public policy at George Mason University who has followed Mr. Robertson for years. "But there is a real strong core of activists throughout the country who support and like Pat Robertson, might even agree with some of the things he says, though they might like him to express his views a little more delicately."

For instance, many conservative Christians agree in principle with his comments about the Middle East - the Scriptures, they agree, call for a unified Israel.

Mr. Robertson's daily program, "The 700 Club," is carried in most markets nationwide on ABC Family and the Trinity Broadcasting networks, and drew an average audience of 828,000 viewers in the last quarter of 2005, according to Nielsen Media Research. While he cannot compete with "American Idol," he had more viewers than CNBC or MSNBC in prime time.

As a host, Mr. Robertson regularly draws guests like Republican leaders Bill Frist, Rick Santorum, Tom DeLay and Sam Brownback. Last week, he bantered with Fred Barnes, a Fox commentator and executive editor of The Weekly Standard. The show is also a prime advertising vehicle for Christian books, music and other products.

How many Americans believe in the pre-tribulation 'rapture' theory of premillennialism espoused by Robertson? Millions and millions, including President George W. Bush and members of his cabinet.

So what does the pre-tribulation theory of future world history teach millions of Christian believers about the Jews and Israel? Among other things, that:

  • Israel will occupy all the land of 'Greater Israel', by force if necessary;
  • The Temple will be rebuilt on the Dome of the Rock and animal sacrifices resumed;
  • A 'remnant' of Jews will convert to Christ during the Great Tribulation;
  • The remaining refuseniks will all perish and burn forever in Hell;
  • Israel will be annihilated in the Battle of Armageddon and then be transformed into a Christian kingdom ruled by Jesus Christ for a thousand years.

In politically influential conservative religious circles where these views are held in conjunction with reconstructionist and/or dominionist political philosophy, it is furthermore held that Christians must support the type of domestic and foreign policies that are compatible with such a course of events.

Conservative Jews, Zionists and Israel-boosters who see evangelical fundamentalists as their allies in building a safe future for Israel need to take their blinkers off and see who they've really jumped into bed with. While they think that it is love they see in their paramour's eyes, it is only blood lust. They shouldn't be lulled by pleasant sweet nothings if the ones whispering them are nuturing fundamentally anti-Semitic sentiments.

Here is the Christian right's 'pro-Israel' position: Israel and the Jews as an indispensable plot device in the grand apocalyptic narrative, a final solution envisaged for world Judaism that is second only in horror to Hitler's, crypto-Nazism masquerading in pseudo-Biblical guise as 'love for God's chosen people.'

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» Philo-Semitism and Anti-Semitism from Skipping Towards Armageddon

Interesting piece here at the Washington Post, though I do think it gets a few things wrong, or at least plays them down too much. Especially the term philo-Semitism, which I don't see as the opposite of anti-Semitism. The article Read More

Far be it from me to judge another man's heart, but it certainly seems that Mr. Robertson's comments might just be...oh, I don't know...a violation of the Third Commandment.2 Read More

2 Comments

Bruce Rockwell on February 11, 2006 10:13 PM
Pat Robertson believes in the pretrib view? Are you sure? I have often heard him say that he is a posttrib. And he has said on his program that Margaret Macdonald originated the pretrib view in 1830. If you have proof that he has changed, I would like to see it. Bruce
Bruce, it looks like you are correct. Pat Robertson beieves in a post-tribulation rapture. My mistake. Big deal. I meant to say 'pre-millennial'. There is hardly a world of difference between the two views. Only the precise timing of the rapture and the amount of suffering 'true' Christians might be forced to undergo. Let me make it clear. There is no such thing as a rapture in the bible. Pre- or post-tribulation, pre- or post-millenial. No such thing, period. Believe what you want. Dispensationalist and other 'future historical' schemes are a distortion of scripture and a sad indication of the current state of so-called Christian faith in this country.

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