Christian Zionist and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem. In a recent speech, Huckabee implied that Israel is America’s wife.
In a post on X dated 11/01/2025, Tony Perkins quoted Mike Gallagher saying, “Israel has a right to exist. I believe [what] the Bible tells us about God’s chosen people….”[1]
One of the central tenets of Christian Zionism is that the Jews, because they are Jews, apart from belief in the Lord Jesus Christ, are God’s chosen people. But is this what the Bible teaches?
Sebastian Zapeta, the man suspected of setting a woman on fire on a New York subway. Reports indicate that he’s from Guatemala and is an illegal alien. According to Tom Homan, Trump’s incoming Border Czar, the Biden Regime “did not deport [him] when they had the chance.” Sadly, another American is dead because of the treasonous immigration policy of “Jesuit” Joe Biden and his Antichrist boss in the Vatican.
Antichrist never stops lying about what the Scriptures teach about immigration, not even during Christmas. Quite the contrary, far from taking a break from his lies during Christmas, the Pope and his henchmen crank up the volume, hoping to deceive, if possible, even the elect.
Central to the Antichrist’s Christmastide immigration lies is his attempt to spin the millions upon millions of illegal aliens pouring across America’s southern border as mirroring the Biblical account of Joseph taking Mary and Jesus and fleeing to Egypt to escape Herod’s persecution.
While on the surface, Rome’s argument may seem plausible, closer examination shows it to be just another lie from the Antichrist Roman Catholic Church-State designed to further its globalist ambitions. Let’s take a look at it.
Martin Luther as the “German Hercules” vanquishing the doctors of Rome. Hans Holbein the Younger, 1520. Brother Martin was not confused about the identity of Antichrist.
Have you prayed against Antichrist today?
To answer that question truthfully, you first need to know who Antichrist is. Protestants once knew the identity of Antichrist. But the Protestant school of prophetic interpretation has been out of fashion for a long time, and other systems such as Postmillennialism, Amillennialism, and Dispensationalism have captured the bulk of Reformed and Evangelical pulpits in our day.
For the Postmillennialists, Antichrist is yesterday’s news. He came and went in the first century, so there’s no need to pray against him. For in the literal sense of the word he is history.
With the Dispensationalists it’s not much different. For them, there’s no need to pray against Antichrist, because Antichrist will not appear until sometime in the future. When Isaiah prophesied to King Hezekiah that the Babylonians would come and carry off all Judah’s treasure to Babylon, he exclaimed, “The word of the LORD which you have spoken is good…Will there not be peace and truth at least in my days?” Hezekiah saw the destruction of Jerusalem as a small thing since it was an event in the distant future and would not affect him. Not Hezekiah’s finest moment, that. For Dispensationalists, it is much the same way. The coming of Antichrist is a future event and not a clear and present danger. Perhaps some Dispensationalists pray against the supposedly future Antichrist, but human nature being what it is, probably most do not.