JUDAISM: OUR NATIONAL RELIGION?
By Harmony Grant Daws
5 Jan 10
If America had a national religion, what would it be? We were founded
by Christians and deists. Over 75 percent of us still profess Christianity.
But I wonder what a space alien would conclude if guessing our national
religion based on public officials, public symbols and the discourse
we allow.
In San
Francisco, it wasn’t nativities or even crosses that were
torn down this year, but stars—after an atheist complained
they were Christian symbols. Yet White House chief of staff Rahm
Emanuel, flanked by two rabbis, needed a cherry picker to reach the
flames of the huge federal menorah in a lighting ceremony in the
capitol. In
Boca Raton Florida, a menorah is allowed on display in the public
library while a Christian nativity scene is banned. This is reminiscent
of the 1989 US Supreme Court decision which banned a nativity scene
from a Pittsburgh courthouse while allowing an 18-foot menorah to
remain!
I n the United States Jews make up 1.3 percent of the population
(in 2001). But they hold a staggering 43 seats in Congress!
That makes them 8 percent of America’s legislators—more
than six times more abundant in the halls of Congress than in the rest
of the nation. Israeli paper Haaretz said frankly that US
officials must face a background check of their position on Israel
before being hired. Last week our president raised federal aid to Israel
in 2010 by $225 million. Next year we struggling taxpayers will hand
over to this tiny tyrant a gigantic $2.775 billion.
Meanwhile, the true Christian position on Israel—that her inheritance
of the Promised Land is conditioned on obedience—is clearly stated
in the Old Testament; but the mainstream evangelical church has been
hijacked by a non-Christian, Zionist position which states
that the untouchable Jewish people are blessed by God no matter what
they do. Sixteen Palestinian
Christians have just published the Kairos document pleading for
support from their American brethren. They request boycotts and economic
sanctions on the state of Israel for its oppression of Palestinians.
But the response of the alleged “Christian” majority in
America to Palestinian needs? It is overwhelmingly Jewish in identity.
Texas mega-church pastor John Hagee founded Christians United for Israel
which has directors in every one of our 50 states. This previous
May, every state in the Union held a simultaneous Night to Honor Israel.
Evangelicals yearly donate tens of millions to Israel.
Perhaps Americans’ brainwashing about Israel has something
to do with the nearly two hundred Holocaust films made by
major media. Jews dominate Hollywood and big media in America (as was
recently boasted
by Jewish columnist Joel Stein in the LA Times). This
makes them the most powerful producers of American culture. Americans
are also taught to hallow
the Holocaust by 16 museums around the nation including a large
and federally supported one in the National Mall; the website for that
museum hosts 25 million visits daily.
Jewish supremacy isn’t a purely American phenomenon. Jews are
overrepresented in seats of power in nations around the world. Israel
and Jewish activists seek to unite us all under a one-world ban on
criticism of Israel, an overblown definition of “anti-Semitism,” and
a “human rights” bureaucracy ruled from Jerusalem. Many
other nations in and outside of Europe have citizens far more aware
of Jewish supremacism than are Americans. In the Republic of Moldova,
anger is so intense that about two hundred residents led by an Orthodox
priest tore down a large menorah erected in a public square this Christmas.
The Orthodox
church issued a statement acknowledging that the protest was unpleasant
but also stating: “ we think it inappropriate to put a symbol
of the Jewish cult in a public place connected to the history and faith
of our people, especially because Chanukah is classified by the cult
books of Judaism as a 'holiday of blessing' that symbolizes the victory
of Jews over non-Jews."
A public menorah was also defaced in protest in Buenos Aires over
Hanukkah. The words “Argentina is Catholic” were painted
on its base. A local rabbi said he did not believe the local population
was anti-Semitic and reasoned, “It must be understood that we
are living in a Christian country where Jews account for less than
one percent of the population.”
This is true. Jews account for less than one or two percent of the
population of most nations yet the influence and power of Jewish supremacism
continues to grow. This is largely because Gentile and Christian nations
are afraid (cowed by the label “anti-Semite!”) to consider
that Jewish supremacists have an ethnic and religious agenda to undermine
Gentile, Christian civilization—just as Christians have an agenda
to spread it. The epic, spiritual struggle between Christ and the Jews
now spans over two millennia. American Christians, by ignoring the
battle, surrender their nation.
National Prayer Network, P.O. Box 828, Clackamas,
OR 97015