“Christ is king”

So to sum up:
Filly, HWM admit to not reading it, bu they reported it.
MBK claimed to have read it, but misunderstood it, and reported it
And Dec27 claimed to have read it, and reported it, but:-
I think what the RWR fecktards are basically saying, is that odds could post a thread about washing machine maintenance and the slack-jawed droolers will report it as offensive antisemitic material (to them).

They have become ever more desperate and irrational, since being asked to find a shred of antisemitic, Jew hating material, and failing so badly.

The wait goes on....
 
If some of you didn't like the op article from AP, then y'all really not gonna dig this...

The turn on the right isn’t just about geopolitics — it’s about theology; as Carlson described it in his podcast interview with white nationalist influencer Nick Fuentes, is a “Christian Zionism is a brain virus” and “dangerous heresy.”

Carlson’s point of view appears to resonate especially with younger evangelicals. A survey commissioned by the University of North Carolina at Pembroke and administered by the Barna Group found that support for Israel among young evangelicals fell from 75 percent in 2018 to just 34 percent in 2021. This trend is of a piece with a decline in Biblical literalism. In 2022, a Gallup poll found that just 20 percent of Americans describe the Bible as the literal word of God — an all-time low.

The consequence is subtle but profound: Support for Israel increasingly has to be justified in political and civilizational terms, not prophetic ones. And when the theology thins out, older guardrails around how Christians talk about Jews — why they matter, what role they play in history — can thin out too.

None of this means younger conservative Christians are uniformly “anti-Israel.” But it does mean that a once-powerful permission structure — the belief that modern Israel is a prophetic signpost that faithful Christians are obligated to protect — has weakened. In that vacuum, a different permission structure has taken shape: a populist right-wing suspicion of foreign-policy commitments, with Israel often cast as a symbol of an outdated Republican establishment.

Read on @ Associated Press before y'all get your panties in a bunch.
 
If some of you didn't like the op article from AP, then y'all really not gonna dig this...

The turn on the right isn’t just about geopolitics — it’s about theology; as Carlson described it in his podcast interview with white nationalist influencer Nick Fuentes, is a “Christian Zionism is a brain virus” and “dangerous heresy.”

Carlson’s point of view appears to resonate especially with younger evangelicals. A survey commissioned by the University of North Carolina at Pembroke and administered by the Barna Group found that support for Israel among young evangelicals fell from 75 percent in 2018 to just 34 percent in 2021. This trend is of a piece with a decline in Biblical literalism. In 2022, a Gallup poll found that just 20 percent of Americans describe the Bible as the literal word of God — an all-time low.

The consequence is subtle but profound: Support for Israel increasingly has to be justified in political and civilizational terms, not prophetic ones. And when the theology thins out, older guardrails around how Christians talk about Jews — why they matter, what role they play in history — can thin out too.

None of this means younger conservative Christians are uniformly “anti-Israel.” But it does mean that a once-powerful permission structure — the belief that modern Israel is a prophetic signpost that faithful Christians are obligated to protect — has weakened. In that vacuum, a different permission structure has taken shape: a populist right-wing suspicion of foreign-policy commitments, with Israel often cast as a symbol of an outdated Republican establishment.

Read on @ Associated Press before y'all get your panties in a bunch.
Reported
 
did u read it?
These trends in American politics may explain the recent statement by former Israeli Ambassador to the United States Ron Dermer that Israel should spend more of its energy reaching out to “passionate” American evangelicals than to Jews, who are “disproportionately among our critics.” Criticizing Dermer, Israel’s former consul general in New York, Dani Dayan, added that “our embassy in the United States capital has invested most of its energy in the relationship with conservatives, Republicans, evangelicals, and a certain type of Jews only.”
 
These trends in American politics may explain the recent statement by former Israeli Ambassador to the United States Ron Dermer that Israel should spend more of its energy reaching out to “passionate” American evangelicals than to Jews, who are “disproportionately among our critics.” Criticizing Dermer, Israel’s former consul general in New York, Dani Dayan, added that “our embassy in the United States capital has invested most of its energy in the relationship with conservatives, Republicans, evangelicals, and a certain type of Jews only.”

where did you get that from?
 
Back
Top