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.
Beit Lahia in northern Gaza on Dec. 26, following Israeli bombardments. PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
I’ve written a great deal over the years in the space criticizing Roman Catholicism, but I’ve not had much to say about Dispensationalism. But both of them seem to have this in common: they are deeply superstitious.
Now Romanism and Dispensationalism are not superstitious in the same way. Romanism with its worship of Mary and the saints,[1] its doctrine of transubstantiation, and its cult of relics is thoroughly imbued with superstition. Dispensationalism, on the other hand, is a superstition that has taken over large parts of the professing Evangelical church in the United States, its chief superstition being the worship, or something close to it, of the modern nation-state of Israel.
Pastor Greg Locke, a Baptist preacher, is one of many examples of Israel worshipping American Evangelicals on the scene today. In a post on X dated 5/11/2024, Locke spent 588 words expressing his thoughts on Israel, even threatening to dismiss congregants whose views did not conform to his. Locke wrote, “In the last days there will be ONE dividing factor in the Body of Christ.” Locke enumerated several things that were not dividing factors: who kept their church open or closed (apparently a reference to Covid), cessationists vs. those who operate “in the gifts,” traditional vs. contemporary worship, or Bible versions. Interestingly, Locke did not mention those who believe in sovereign grace or free will or those who hold to justification by belief alone vs. those who hold that one is saved by faith plus something else. No, these are all minor issues. The big dividing line for Pastor Locke is what one believes about the nation-state of Israel.