By Mark Tooley on 7.9.10 @ 6:07AM
Some of its condemnations are off the wall.
The nearly 3 million member Presbyterian Church (USA) is
pondering yet one more condemnation of Israel, which ranks along
with the U.S. as the world's nearly only sinful nation, at least
according to liberal Mainline Protestant elites. Several years
ago, Presbyterians approved an anti-Israel divestment policy that
was quickly revoked after enormous criticism from Christians and
Jews. On July 3, the denomination's General Assembly will meet
across 10 days and consider a new anti-Israel policy from its
Middle East Study Commission.
Like the failed divestment policy, the new proposed
anti-Israel policy stance is meeting considerable resistance,
including from former New York Times religion reporter
Gustav Niebuhr (nephew of the famed Christian theologian Reinhold
Niebuhr), and Christian Century magazine, the longtime
flagship journal of liberal Mainline Protestantism. In the 1940s
and 1950s, liberal Mainline Protestants elites were typically
ardent Zionists. The radicalism of the 1960s and 1970s shifted
them to pro-Palestinian, under the guidance of Liberation
Theology, which portrayed Israel as the colonial oppressor. But
extreme anti-Israel stances still arouse the vocal ire of some
liberal Protestant voices, who cherish Jewish interfaith ties,
and who also remember Israel's early history, when America's
Protestant elite, including the elder Niebuhr, were enthusiastic
boosters.
A former long-time editor and publisher of Christian
Century who remains a contributing editor, James Wall,
himself an ordained United Methodist, is responding angrily to
the liberal dissent against the proposed Presbyterian
condemnation of Israel, especially on the pages of his former
journal. In a recent blog, he virtually slammed the critics as
Israeli inspired provocateurs trying to disrupt a Christian
denomination. Indeed, his blog's provocative headline
was: "Israeli 'Agents' Infiltrate Presbyterian
General Assembly." Ominously asking why two publications,
Christian Century and Newsweek's religion blog,
are presenting "one side" before the church convention, Wall
explained they are "merely following the lead of other American
media who, either wittingly or unwittingly, are following the
guidance of the Hasbara propaganda army, Israel's public
information program designed to sell Israel as a peace-loving and
misunderstood victim surrounded by hateful neighbors."
Exasperated by Hasbara's supposed success, Wall opined,
"One of the mysteries of collective human sin that will plague
scholars of this century for generations to come, will be to find
some rational explanation of why Americans, who otherwise find
the violations of human rights to be repugnant, have been, and
continue to be, such easy targets for Hasbara propaganda." For
good measure, he also decried the New York
Times's Tom Friedman as the "high priest of Hasbara,"
though Friedman has not seemingly directly addressed the proposed
Presbyterian stance, but is merely guilty of occasionally
defending Israel.
The so-called Israeli "Hasbara" control of American public
opinion is an ongoing preoccupation for Wall, who has led many
anti-Israel ostensible fact-finding missions to the Middle East
over the years, and whose nearly three-decade reign over
Christian Century included frequent salvos against
Israel. Tracking with liberal Mainline Protestantism as a whole,
that journal which once represented mainstream Protestant opinion
fell into near collapse in the wake of Wall's long editorship,
partially reviving since his departure as editor by shifting
towards the center. Recently, Wall also blamed White House
correspondent Helen Thomas's disgrace and retirement on Hasbara,
which supposedly wanted to punish her and shift attention away
from the Israeli confrontation with the Gaza flotilla. Wall
derided Thomas's critics as PEP's, or Progressives Instead of
Palestine. Progressive Protestants like Martin Luther King, Jr.
once championed Zionism as social justice. But the hard Religious
Left, so entrenched against America, Israel and Western
Civilization, often reacts peevishly against any reminder of
liberal Protestantism's nobler, earlier decades.
Angrily, Wall is wondering whether voting commissioners at
the Presbyterian assembly will be "duped" by Israel's "Hasbara
Warriors" or more thoughtfully will "listen to our Presbyterian
Commissioners who have studied, prayed about, and witnessed the
gross injustice of Israel's occupation of the Palestinian
people?" The supposedly Hasbara-inspired Christian
Century column
that irked Wall came from two Vanderbilt University
professors who wrote about the proposed Presbyterian policy:
"Despite numerous attempts by mainline Protestant denominations
to promote historically informed studies of Judaism, repudiate
supersessionist theologies and engage in conversations with Jews,
the old habit of bearing false witness against Jewish neighbors
lives on." They concluded: "In recent years this practice has
thrived, especially in mainline Protestant statements on the
Middle East."
Niebuhr's critique of the Presbyterian proposal in the
Newsweek blog, which he co-authored
with a Presbyterian seminary president, similarly denounced
the anti-Israel stance as "unbalanced, historically inaccurate,
theologically flawed and politically damaging." They also
reported signing "a letter circulating among Presbyterians
nationwide, calling on the General Assembly to reject the Middle
East Study Committee's report." Wall naturally denounced these
signers as "whether they know it or not, in the Hasbara
army."
Evidently a stranger to nuance, at least on this topic,
Wall slammed Israel as guilty of the "the slaughter of the
innocents [which] began with the Nakba [Palestinian term for
"catastrophe"] in 1947," while bemoaning the "harsh reality of
Israel's six decades of immoral and unethical treatment of the
Palestinian people," and the "prison-like conditions under which
Palestinians are forced to live."
Wall does not seem to get similarly exercised over the sins
of Israel's neighbors, or of virtually any other government in
the world. And the Presbyterians do not have study committees or
proposed human rights critiques aimed at Egypt, Saudi Arabia,
Syria, Iran, or other non-democracies notorious for abuses and
oppression.
At the risk of being accused of serving in the Hasbara
Army, here
is my Presbyterian colleague Alan Wisdom's own
critique of his church's proposed anti-Israel stance. Religious
Left anti-Israel zealots like Wall believe their opponents are
simply tools of Israeli propaganda. But by the same
conspiratorial measure, whose tool might Wall be?