Originally published by the Jerusalem Post.
  	Monday the Bethlehem Bible College, an Evangelical Christian college  in Jesus’s hometown, opened its fourth biennial Christ at the Checkpoint  conference. The conference, which is directed specifically toward US  Evangelicals, will run through the week.
 	
 	Today, Evangelical  communities in the US number anywhere between 60 and 150 million people,  depending on who is counting. They form the backbone of American  support for the Jewish state. It is the support of the Evangelical  community, rather than the Jewish community in the US that ensures that  come hell or high water, no matter how Israel is demonized in the media  and in academia, the majority of Americans continue to support Israel.But will this support last? 
One of the more surprising aspects of the 2016 elections is Evangelical support for businessman Donald Trump. Trump in many ways personifies everything that people who take the Bible seriously are supposed to oppose. He owns casinos. He curses and uses profanity in his public appearances. He has donated to Planned Parenthood and forcefully supported abortions on demand.
 	Trump has also insisted repeatedly that he will be neutral toward Israel.
 	
  	Perhaps the most extraordinary aspect of Evangelical support for Trump  is that he takes these positions as he runs against primary opponents  who all wear their faith on their sleeves. All of his opponents have  records of standing with the Evangelicals on social and other salient  issues – including support for Israel.
 	
 	What are we to make of  this seemingly inexplicable phenomenon? At least as far as Israel is  concerned, the readiness of Evangelicals to support the most anti-Israel  candidate running for the Republican presidential nomination is no  surprise.
 	
 	To understand why this is the case, the Christ at  the Checkpoint conference taking place this week in Bethlehem is a good  place to look.
 	
 	According to its website, the mission of the  biennial conference “is to challenge Evangelicals to take responsibility  to help resolve the conflicts in Israel/ Palestine by engaging with the  teaching of Jesus on the Kingdom of God.”
 	
 	The problem begins  with the organizers’ interpretation of those teachings. College  officials, among them keynote speakers at the conference, embrace and  teach replacement theology. That theology maintains that God’s covenant  with the Jews ended with Christianity.
 	
 	In recent years,  replacement theology has extended its biblical revisionism from Jews as  people reviled for their rejection of Jesus and their supersession by  Christians to Israel. The Jewish state is reviled as a religiously  prohibited entity whose very existence is a sin against God.
 	
 	 According to current replacement theology, Jesus was not a Jew. He was a  Palestinian. The Jews are not a people. They have no rights to the land  of Israel.
 	
 	Israel, it is asserted, has no historical or  theological right to exist. Rather, according to the rewritten  scriptures, the Palestinians are the chosen people.
 	
 	Jews are colonialist invaders who have taken the land of Israel away from their rightful, biblically sanctioned owners.
 	
 	This basic view is encapsulated in the very name “Christ at the Checkpoint.”
 	
  	Today a Jewish Jesus would be prohibited from entering Bethlehem. Jews  are barred from entering Palestinian population centers because  Palestinians have a habit of murdering them. Indeed, just last week two  IDF soldiers who accidentally entered a Palestinian village north of  Jerusalem escaped a lynch mob by the skin of their teeth.
 	
 	On  the other hand, a Palestinian Jesus can be in Bethlehem. But to leave he  has to go through an Israeli checkpoint (to ensure that he isn’t a  terrorist, to be sure, but whatever).
 	
 	So the image evoked by the name “Christ at the Checkpoint” ignores the reality of Palestinian terrorism.
 	
 	And it leaves us with an image of the repression of a Palestinian Jesus at the hands of the Jews.
 	
  	The replacement theology at the heart of the conference was made  explicit by Rev. Jack Sara, president of the Bethlehem Bible Conference,  at the 2012 conference. In his speech Sara edited Chapter 37 of the  book of Ezekiel to transform the dry bones prophecy. That prophecy, of  course, is one of the most Zionist passages in the Bible. God speaks to  Ezekiel and tells him that the people of Israel will be reborn. They  will be gathered from the four corners of the earth, return to Israel  and restore the Davidic kingdom.
 	
 	Yet in Sara’s revised version, the people of Israel, the descendants of Jacob, are replaced by the Palestinians.
 	
  	Sara preached, “The hand of the Lord was on me and He brought me out  by the Spirit of the Lord and sent me in the middle of the West Bank –  Bethlehem, Jenin and Salvit and Nablus and Ramallah.
 	
 	It was  full of bones.... He asked me, ‘Son of Man, can these bones live? Can  the Palestinian people live?’ Then He said to me ‘prophesy to these  bones and same to them, ‘Dry bones, hear the word of the Lord.’” Sara  then said, “You see, the Palestinian people were and are a lot like this  valley of dry bones that is in need of the Church to come and prophesy  life on them.”
 	
 	Last March the Bethlehem Bible College posted a  promotional video ahead of a summer Christ at the Checkpoint conference  directed toward young adults.
 	
 	As Tricia Miller, who works as  a senior research analyst for CAMERA noted, Christ at the Checkpoint  director Munther Issac billed the conference as a means to empower  Palestinian Christians.
 	
 	The conference website said that the  conference’s aim was “to motivate Palestinian Christian youth to take an  active role as followers of Christ in spreading justice and peace,  through discussing the challenges of our societies from a biblical  perspective.”
 	
 	Yet, as Miller noted in an article in The Times  of Israel, the promotional video for the conference made clear that the  conference had no intention of “spreading justice and peace.”
 	
  	The video interlaced footage of Palestinians walking in heavy traffic  and waiting to cross into sovereign Israel with footage from Islamic  State (ISIS) videos showing hostages about to be beheaded and burned  alive. Israeli flags flapping in the wind were juxtaposed with the ISIS  flag.
 	
 	And then, apropos of nothing, the video showed the cellular structure of the H1N1 swine flu virus.
 	
  	The implied message was clear. Just as Nazi propaganda depicted Jews  as viruses, so the Christ at the Checkpoint video depicted Israel as the  moral equivalent of ISIS and the medical equivalent of swine flu.
 	
  	In 2014, David Brog published in article in Middle East Quarterly  detailing the key role the Bethlehem Bible College plays in a wider  campaign directed toward American Evangelicals whose goal is to  undermine and eventually end their support for Israel.
 	
 	Key  figures in this undertaking bring American church leaders and academics  to Bethlehem and feed them a diet of anti-Israel propaganda and outright  lies masquerading as biblical teaching and objective assessments of  reality. These American Christian leaders have taken up the cause of  ending support for Israel among Evangelicals upon their return home.
 	
  	Key financiers, like Mart Green, the heir of the Hobby Lobby fortune  and the chairman of the board of trustees of Oral Roberts University,  and financier George Soros have been instrumental in disseminating these  positions to all levels of the Evangelical community in the US.
 	
  	In September 2014, Senator Ted Cruz spoke before Middle Eastern  Christians, who convened in Washington ostensibly to discuss the  genocide of Christians in the Middle East. Cruz was booed off the stage  after telling the audience, “Today Christians have no greater ally than  the Jewish state.”
 	
 	Cruz added, “The very same people who  persecute and murder Christians right now, who crucify Christians, who  behead children, are the very same people who target and murder Jews for  the very same reason.”
 	
 	Cruz’s statement marked the first  time a major US political leader stood up to the Jew hatred of Middle  Eastern Christians and pointed out its irrationality and self-defeating  core.
 	
 	It could have been a seminal moment in the discourse on  Islamic persecution of Christians. But rather than be embraced for his  willingness to speak the truth to those who reject it even in the face  of genocide, Cruz was assaulted as undiplomatic by Washington Post  writer Jennifer Rubin. His message was largely ignored outside of policy  circles.
 	
 	To be sure, the largest Evangelical communities  remain solidly supportive of Israel, and their size dwarfs that of the  rising forces of replacement theology and its concomitant hatred of  Israel. Yet, as Brog noted, the long-term trends are discouraging.
 	
  	Moreover, the readiness of Evangelical voters to support the only  Republican candidate who says he will be neutral in his handling of the  Palestinian conflict with Israel indicates that anti-Israel Christians  may already be having a profound impact on their communities.
 	
  	This trend represents a strategic threat to US-Israel relations. Those  who wish to maintain those relations in the long term must fight this  trend head on, beginning with this week’s Christ at the Checkpoint  conference.


 
  