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Author Topic: CUFI and the Abomination of Desolation  (Read 661 times)

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CUFI and the Abomination of Desolation
« on: October 08, 2008, 09:56:14 PM »
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  • CUFI and the Abomination of Desolation


    Bernard Pyron

    Matthew 24: 15 says "When ye therefore shall see the abomination of
    desolation spoken of by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place,
    (whoso readeth, let him understand) then let them which be in Judae
    flee into the mountains."

    The Holy Place could be the Temple, which the dispensationalists
    take to be the literal Temple in Jerusalem, which they claim is to
    be re-built soon.

    But Paul says in I Corinthians 3: 16 that "Knew ye not that ye are the
    temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you? If any man
    defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy: for the temple of
    God is holy, which temple ye
    are."

    Some claim that Matthew 24: 15-16 deals with an earlier timeline,
    that of the
    destruction of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. What the early fullfilment of the
    abomination
    of desolation might have been in 70 AD is not clear. Remember, that
    at
    Christ's crucifixion death the veil of the Temple in Jerusalem was
    torn, (Matthew 27: 51),
    signifying that God was through with the Jєωιѕн Temple building.

    So, Matthew 24: 15-16 is a prophecy for the end times. Since the
    holy place
    is the temple, which is the hearts of the believers, then what could
    enter
    into the hearts of the true Christians that would be an abomination?

    The abomination of desolation is the renewal of the Jєωιѕн system of animal
    sacrifice after 2,000 years. That would be a slap in the face of
    Christ since
    he died once and for all to pay for our sins. It would be an
    abomination
    in the hearts of Christ's true followers. It would not make the true
    Christians desolate, but would do so for those who carried out the
    animal
    sacrifices, and for those within the so called Christian Churches who
    have supported physical Israel and the build up to renewal of animal
    sacrifices.

    Paul says if anyone defiles the temple of God which is the
    true Christians, God will destroy him. CUFI, Christians United for
    Israel, had better look out, because they are set to support the build
    up of physical Israel (Paul distinguishes between spiritual Israel and
    physical Israel - I Corinthians 10: 18) toward re-establishing the
    animal sacrifice
    system for forgiveness of sins.

     Look at the abomination of desolation. Its found in Daniel 11:31,
    Daniel 12: 11, Matthew 24: 15, and Mark 13: 14. Matthew 24: 15 says
    when you see the abomination of desolation, then in verse 21 "For then
    shall be great tribulation, such as was not since he beginning of the
    world to this time, no, nor ever shall be."

    Mark 13: 14 says "But when ye see the abomination of desolation,
    spoken of by Daniel the prophet, standing where it ought not (let him
    that readeth understand)..."

    The abomination that causes desolation is something that stands or
    happens where it ought not to happen. What could it be?

    Hebrews 7: 27 says "Who needeth not daily, as those high priests, to
    offer up sacrifice, first for his own sins, and then for the people's:
    for this he did once, when he offered up himself."

    Hebrews 10: 12 confirms that Jesus Christ sacrificed himself in man's
    flesh once and for always in saying "But this man, after he had offered
    one sacrifice for sins for ever, sat down on the right hand of God;"

    The Old Testament system of animal sacrifice was a type or metaphor
    pointing to Christ's once and forever sacrifice on the cross for man's
    sins.

    To renew the Old Testament animal sacrifice by the new Sanhedrin
    would be to insult Christ who died once for our sins. It would be an
    abomination to the Lord and to his people to renew Jєωιѕн animal
    sacrifices for sin in Jerusalem.

    On http://www.lamblion.com/articles/prophecy/Jєωs-Israel/Jєωs-17.php
    it says "On October 13, 2004, the Sanhedrin Council of the Jєωιѕн
    nation was reconstituted for the first time in 1,600 years. The
    ceremony took place in the Israeli town of Tiberias, located on the
    western shore of the Sea of Galilee. This was the site of the council's
    last meeting in the year 425 AD.

    Then at http://www.beliefnet.com/story/214/story_21456_1.html
    it says "In a donated apartment concealed among the narrow streets of
    the Jerusalem suburb of Nahlaot, 13 Orthodox Jєωιѕн men meet every
    Tuesday to debate matters of Jєωιѕн law. They are the management team
    of a larger developing Sanhedrin, or religious court, in Israel.

    And they plan to sacrifice sheep on the Temple Mount on the day before
    or one month after Passover, which starts at sundown April 2. Either
    date is permissible under Jєωιѕн law. "If the government will not
    resist," said Rabbi Dov Stein, 68, a member of the group, "we will do
    it."

    Deborah Pardo-Kaplan in Religion News Service says "For these Jєωs, the
    sacrificial Passover offering is not their redemption per se, yet it is
    vital to the process." This is the old works salvation.

    The renewal of animal sacrifices is something done by the тαℓмυdic
    leaders. But the extreme form of dispensationalism followed by
    Christian John
    Hagee and his organization CUFI exalts physical and unsaved Israel
    over spiritual and saved Israel. This can also be a part of the
    abomination of desolation, and it is done by those claiming to be
    Christian evangelicals. Hagee does not try to convert the Jєωs he
    addresses, leaving them without Christ who they must have to be saved.

    But in some parts of the patriot movement, among those who take on
    aspects of Christianity, the argument that saved Christians are
    spiritual Israel and the unsaved Jєωs are not God's chosen people
    has become disorted into an anti-Jєωιѕн crusade. An Anti-Jєωιѕн
    doctrine, along with Christian Identity and the Sacred Name
    Movement, has hijacked parts of the patriot movement. I know, the
    ADL will say Remnant Christians are "anti-semetic in saying we are
    Spiritual Israel, not unsaved Jєωs, regardless of whether we
    really are or not. But we should not displease the Lord by our
    racism. Dispensationalism and Christian Identity are both forms of
    racism. Classical dispensationalism teaches that being a Jєω is all
    that is necessary to qualify one as being a member of God's chosen
    people. Christian Identity claims they are "chosen" because somehow
    they are from one of the lost tribes of Israel.

    The dispensationalist celebrities have taught that physical Israel
    is still God's chosen people. They hold up physical Israel and
    in so doing they are giving up their own position in Christ as
    members of spiritual Israel. I Peter 2: 9 says we Christians, not
    Jєωs who do not accept Christ, are "...a chosen generation, a royal
    priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people..."

    In giving up their position in Christ to Jєωs who do not accept him,
    the dispensationalist Christian Zionists are doing something similar
    to selling one's birthright. Paul says in Romans 9: 13 that God
    hated Esau. Why? Because Esau sold his birthright (Genesis 25: 33).

    Remember Paul taught that there is a spiritual Isreal made up of all
    the spiitual seed of Abraham, which includes everyone who is in
    Christ,
    and there is Israel after the flesh, who have rejected Jesus Christ
    (I Corinthians
    10: 18, Galatians 3: 29, Romans 9: 6, Romans 11: 26).

    The political nation of Israel, the Jєωιѕн тαℓмυd, Kabballah and the
    Zionist movement are all physical Israel.

    Here is a link to one web site dealing with the issue of the Jєωιѕн
    renewal of animal sacrifices:
    http://www.templeinstitute.org/archive/08-04-05j.htm

    Sue Patterson and Randy Maugans of The Threshing Floor did a
    series of broadcasts on the Abomination of Desolation in early
    2006. The web address for their series is:
    http://threshingfloor.onevoicemm.net/weblog/?m=200602&paged=1

    The earlier shows in the Abomination of Desolation series are
    toward the bottom of the page.

    The excerpts below are from:

    http://www.mediatransparency.com/story.php?storyID=116

    "Think of CUFI as a Christian version of American Israel Public
    Affairs Committee (AIPAC)," the powerful pro-Israel lobby, Hagee told
    The Jerusalem Post in an interview a few days before the early
    February summit. "We need to be able to respond instantly to
    Washington with our concerns about Israel. We must join forces to
    speak as one group and move as one body to [respond to] the crisis
    Israel will be facing in the near future."

    A post-meeting report at The John Hagee Ministries website pointed out
    that Christians United for Israel had put together a National Board
    consisting of Hagee as National Chairman, Dr. Jerry Falwell, Gary
    Bauer, president of American Values, and Pastor George Morrison of
    Arvada, Colorado. "In addition to a National Board, twelve Regional
    Directors were authorized over at least four states. The Regional
    Directors will appoint State Directors who will appoint City
    Directors," the website noted

    A report in the San Antonio Express-News pointed out that CUFI was the
    "first-of-its kind umbrella organization embraced by the local Jєωιѕн
    community."

    Rabbi Aryeh Scheinberg of San Antonio's Congregation Rodfei Sholom
    attended the meeting and called it a historic gathering. Scheinberg
    told the San Antonio Express-News that "It's the first nationwide
    effort I know of to unify evangelical leaders in support of Israel.
    These leaders who participated speak for millions of people. This
    organization has phenomenal potential in supporting, defending and
    advocating for Israel."

    Pastor Hagee and Rabbi Scheinberg go way back. In a story entitled
    "Our Jєωιѕн Roots" published in JHMagazine, Hagee tells of a June 1978
    visit to Israel where he "went ... as a tourist and came home a
    Zionist." When he returned home he decided to organize "A Night to
    Honor Israel." According to Hagee's account, Rabbi Scheinberg "pressed
    the Jєωιѕн Community into taking a chance and extending its hand in
    mutual friendship."

    Hagee's apocalyptic vision
    In 1998, Hagee teamed up with Christian filmmakers Peter and Paul
    Lelond to make "Vanished in the Twinkling of an Eye," a "docudrama,"
    about the aftermath of the rapture. According to a description of the
    film at Yahoo! Movies, "Hagee appears periodically to relate the on
    screen action to the Word of God so that he might explain how each
    scene is prophesied by Bible, and how one might avoid being one of
    those left behind." (For an evangelical perspective on the movie, see
    here).

    In a piece for The Texas Observer written in December 2003, Lou
    Dubose, the former longtime editor of that publication, and the
    co-author with columnist Molly Ivins of "Bushwhacked: Life in George
    W. Bush's America" and "Schrub: The Short But Happy Political Life of
    George W. Bush," called Hagee "a pre-millennial dispensationalist,
    whose theology focuses on selected apocalyptic passages of the book of
    Revelations."

    Dubose explained:

    In order for Christ to return, by this interpretation, certain
    biblical prophecies must be fulfilled: The Temple must be rebuilt for
    a third time on the Temple Mount; the anti-Christ must manifest
    himself and be defeated by Christ, who will then keep the Devil bound
    for 1,000 years of peace; the biblical kingdoms of Israel -- Judea and
    Samaria -- will be united; and the Jєωs, having done their part, will
    either convert or perish ("The Righteous Brothers: Over the top with
    Tom DeLay" December 5, 2003).

    However, in their 2004 book "The Hammer --Tom DeLay: God, Money, and
    the Rise of the Republican Congress," Dubose and Jan Reid point out
    that Hagee seems to have switched up on the
    Jєωs-will-convert-or-perish part of his vision -- a concept that many
    Jєωs find particularly troubling, and managed to finesse the issue so
    Jєωs don't wind up getting Left Behind:

    [Hagee] cuts Jєωs in on Christian salvation. His theology includes a
    loophole for Jєωs, or to borrow a phrase from Liberation Theology, "a
    preferential option" for the Jєωs. Unlike his dispensationalist
    brethren, Hagee allows that Jєωs can be saved from eternal damnation
    because they're covered by the First Covenant between God and his
    people. The get into Heaven by what might be called a grandfather
    clause.

    (In a piece posted at JPost.com dated March 2, 2006, Hagee "denied" a
    recent report in the Jerusalem Post that he "embrace[d] the 'dual
    covenant' theology." In a statement to the Post, Hagee said that he
    doesn't "believe or teach Dual Covenant." Hagee pointed out that he
    had "made it a practice for 25 years not to target Jєωs for
    conversion" at the "Night to Honor Israel" events. If Jєωs "inquire
    about our faith at a later time, we give them a full scriptural
    presentation of redemption," he added.)

    The Hagee/DeLay/Netanyahu connection
    Hagee's political druthers and religious vision were on full display
    at the 2002 edition of "A Night to Honor Israel." The keynote speaker
    at the event was Texas Rep. Tom DeLay, the then majority leader of the
    House of Representatives. In full pre-indictment swagger, DeLay
    praised "President Bush's moral clarity," and reiterated his
    opposition to giving up land to the Palestinians.

    "I've stood on the Golan," DeLay said. "When I looked to the
    southwest, I don't see occupied territory. I see Israel. I've walked
    on the streets of Jerusalem. I've been to Judea and Samaria."

    The Texas Observer reported that "At the climax of the evening, Hagee
    presented a giant cardboard check for $1.5 million to the President
    and CEO of the United Jєωιѕн Communities," to be used for [the
    relocation of] Russian Jєωs to Israel. Hagee believes that bringing
    Jєωs to Israel will help to fulfill the biblical prophecy of 'the
    beginning of the end.'"

    Instead of the Book of Revelations, talk of statecraft -- radical
    Christian Republican-style -- dominated. Together Hagee, DeLay, and
    [former Israeli prime minister Benjamin] Netanyahu [via a video feed
    from Israel] hit similar points: Jerusalem belongs to Israel; the west
    bank belongs to Israel; the Temple Mount belongs to Israel; the U.S.
    Embassy should be in Jerusalem not Tel Aviv; Yasser Arafat is a
    terrorist with whom one cannot negotiate; and unconditional support
    for Israel is the only option. As Hagee repeatedly noted, "Israel is
    the only nation on earth created by a sovereign act of God."

    Hagee, the author of a number of books including "Attack on America
    --New York, Jerusalem, and the role of Terrorism in the Last Days,"
    and "The Beginning of the End -- The Assassination of Yitzhak Rabin
    and the Coming Antichrist," recently penned a non-fiction book called
    "Jerusalem Countdown -- A Warning to the World," which has already
    landed on best-seller lists.

    The new book posits that "biblical prophecy is playing itself out
    daily in the Middle East," Agape Press, a Christian-based news
    service, reported. "Hagee says Iran's new president, coupled
    with...[the] victory by terrorist-backed Hamas in the Palestinian
    elections, paves the way for an impending war in the region."

    Bernard