Sunday, February 08, 2026

NO To Scapegoating Jews!

Stop scapegoating Jews. It's idiotic and evil!


There’s a popular teaching regarding Israel in the Church. It’s known as the replacement theory or hard supercessionism, and, while it’s been around for centuries, it’s actively resurging in places that ought to quash it.

The replacement theory essentially says this: God has rejected Israel, and the Church has now “replaced” them as His chosen people, meaning the promises, covenants, and blessings God made to Israel no longer apply to them but only to Christians.

But it’s not a biblically viable position to take, and here’s why. Romans 11 is unambiguous. God has not rejected His people. Israel remains central to His plan, and His promises are irrevocable.

As Michael Bird explains, “The church does not replace Israel, but is the representative of Israel in the messianic age … God is not finished with national Israel and salvation will yet avail for them.” Craig Keener likewise notes that God’s covenantal faithfulness is not contingent on human acceptance. God’s promises to Israel endure whether or not all believe.

When replacement theory takes over, Christians are tempted to abandon our God-ordained obligation to bless Israel and, worse, often to embrace idiotic attempts to scapegoat Jews for everything under the sun. We are used to watching Islamists persecute Jews on college campuses and elsewhere, and most of us on the Christian right know better than to side with that effort, because we understand that radical Islam leads to real-world terror.

But it’s a lot more slippery when we somehow convince ourselves that we are replacing Jewish teaching with a brand of Christianity that promises us power and influence at Israel’s expense. I’ve written before about the rise of Christian Nationalism (the scary kind, not the boogeyman slur progressives hurl at anyone right of Mitch McConnell).

When replacement theology seeps into culture, it doesn’t stay in books or sermons; it shows up in how people talk, organize, and target Jews today.  Believing the Church has replaced Israel primes the imagination to see Jews not as God’s chosen people but as competitors or scapegoats, a theological error that easily bleeds into real-world antisemitism. Replacement theology undermines God’s truth and opens the door to darker impulses. History shows what happens when theological error becomes moral action.

This slippery slope shows up clearly among some voices on the Right. Take influencer Nick Fuentes, whose overt antisemitism is impossible to miss. He has called organized Jewry the main challenge to American sovereignty, described Jews as “unassimilable” and incompatible with Western civilization, and repeatedly praised Hitler as “very f***ing cool” while promoting conspiracy theories about Jewish control and dual loyalty.

Andrew Torba, founder of Gab, has similarly broadcast antisemitic views, declaring that “we’re done” being told what to do in our own country by a 2% minority (referring to Jews), endorsing the idea that this is an explicitly Christian nation where Christians won’t “bend the knee” to Jewish influence, and reposting content that frames Jews as propagandists or enemies.

Candace Owens has taken this further into outright demonization, calling Israel a “cult nation,” urging people to study antisemitic texts like Der Talmudjude to understand how “Talmudic Jews” supposedly view non-Jews as animals with a right to be owned, deceived, and controlled, and claiming Jews controlled the transatlantic slave trade while spreading conspiracies about Hollywood and global influence.

Tucker Carlson, while not always direct, has lent platforms and sympathy to these ideas. He interviewed Fuentes at length, where the conversation turned to “Zionist Jews” as obstacles and “organized Jewry” as a problem, and he pushed narratives about Israeli “psychological influence” over American perceptions of threats, framing pro-Israel Christians as seized by a “brain virus.”

Now we’re seeing this creep into pro-life activism too. Giants like Seth Gruber have right-hand men posting insanely antisemitic condemnations of “the Jews.” Ben Zeisloft, a Christian conservative commentator and communications director for the Foundation to Abolish Abortion, has made several concerning public statements on X. One post declared, “I don’t want Jews, atheists, sexual degenerates, and adherents to false third-world religions like Islam leading the American right-wing.” He has also expressed concerns about “undue Israeli influence over our government,” framing it as a violation of America First principles in ways that echo longstanding tropes.

This is a difficult needle to thread without stepping on toes or setting oneself up for character assassination or misinterpretation. As Christians, we believe the only path to salvation is through belief in the atoning blood of Jesus Christ, a Jew. We do believe that people who die without clinging to that hope go to Hell. There’s no way to sanitize that or make it palatable to those outside our worldview. But that belief ought to inspire aggressive compassion and love for those who don’t know our Jesus, not the demonization of them.

Blessing Israel does not mean we always agree with every leadership decision or policy. It does not mean we aren’t allowed to prioritize our own country first. Think of it like putting your own oxygen mask on before helping others. But what we’re seeing isn’t simple disagreement. It’s outright targeted demonization and scapegoating of an entire people group, exactly as Scripture predicted. We ought not play nice with it.

A brief historical review: For more than 2,000 years, antisemitic conspiracy theories have recycled the same poisonous idea: that “the Jews” are secretly evil, plotting in the shadows, and responsible for society’s worst crises. The details shift with each generation, but the core myth remains constant.

History snapshot:

The pattern is unmistakable: when societies are afraid (of disease, war, revolution, or globalization), they reach for an old scapegoat. And again and again, that scapegoat has been “the Jews.”

Yes, there are powerful, wealthy forces that shape policy and markets. That’s real and worth examining. But blaming a whole people for that power is a lazy, dangerous lie. Imagine if we did this with “the Irish,” or “the Ugandan,s” or the “blue-eyed.” Wouldn’t we immediately recognize how stupid we were being?

“Adolf Hitler and Ted Bundy and Josef Mengele all had blue eyes; therefore all blue-eyed people are secretly plotting world domination.”

See how ridiculous that sounds? That’s exactly what antisemitic conspiracy theories do. They take real individuals, exaggerate their influence, and then smear an entire people as if guilt were genetic.

As followers of the Jewish Messiah, we reject this poison. We stand against replacement theology because it distorts God’s Word. We stand against scapegoating because it defies the command to love our neighbor and bless the descendants of Abraham. Replacement theology is a lie. Antisemitism is a lie. God’s promises to Israel are eternal. The Church shares in the blessing, but never at Israel’s expense. The covenant endures. Let our allegiance reflect it.


Originally published at Honest to Goodness. 



Kaeley Harms, co-founder of Hands Across the Aisle Women’s Coalition, is a Christian feminist who rarely fits into boxes. She is a truth teller, envelope pusher, Jesus follower, abuse survivor, writer, wife, mom, and lover of words aptly spoken.
CP.

Birdie.


 

Forgive.


 

Moscow.

 Lone Anglican church in Moscow suspends worship services.

The only official Anglican congregation in Moscow, Russia, has suspended worship services amid a reported internal dispute over who controls the church.


CT.

Deliverance Ministry.

 https://www.christiantoday.com/news/deliverance-ministry-in-the-church-of-england-draws-fresh-attention

Church Raids.

Reports of persecution and church raids in Russian-occupied Ukraine.

ukraine (Photo: Getty/iStock)

Russian authorities have continued to raid religious worship services in parts of eastern Ukraine, warning congregations that unregistered churches could face repeated disruption unless they comply with Russian law.

On January 25, Russian police and military authorities carried out coordinated raids on Sunday worship services run by two Council of Churches Baptist congregations in Krasnodon town (known in Ukraine as Sorokyne) in the occupied Luhansk region of Ukraine.

Some of the officers were equipped with automatic firearms, according to church leaders.

Pastor Vladimir Rytikov said officers entered the prayer hall during worship, ordered the men present to stand, and recorded the identities of several attendees, Forum 18 reports.




He was later taken to a police station and questioned about the church’s refusal to register under Russian law.

“They said that if we don't register, they'll come to every service and stop it taking place,” Pastor Rytikov said.

A second Baptist congregation in a nearby village, Teple, was raided at the same time by officers from the police unit tasked with countering extremism.

The January raids are part of a broader pattern of enforcement actions against religious communities in Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine.

Between July and December 2025, there were at least seven raids on worship meetings across Russian occupied parts of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Most involved Council of Churches Baptist congregations, which operate without state registration as a matter of principle, Forum 18 reports.

Five religious leaders were fined following these raids under Russia’s “anti-missionary” legislation, which penalises religious activity conducted without official authorisation.

Russian occupying authorities insist that all religious communities must register under Russian law or formally notify the authorities of their existence. Leaders are also required to hold Russian citizenship. Communities that refuse — or that retain links to Ukrainian religious structures — are treated as operating illegally.

Council of Churches Baptists have long declined registration in any country wherever they function. Russian officials, however, claim that unregistered meetings constitute unlawful missionary activity.

Russian courts have repeatedly upheld fines against pastors in occupied Ukraine on this basis, even where services were held in private homes or long-established prayer houses.

The United Nations has repeatedly criticised restrictions on religious freedom in Russian-occupied Ukrainian territory and called on Russian authorities to allow religious communities to practise their faith freely. 

In a report to the UN Human Rights Council, Secretary-General António Guterres stated: “No individual should be criminally charged or detained simply for practising their religion, including in the forms of collective worship and proselytising, in accordance with international human rights law.

“Religious groups in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine should enjoy access to their places of worship and be able to gather freely for prayer and other religious practices."

Rights groups say enforcement actions against churches and other religious communities form part of a wider campaign of pressure in occupied territories, including the closure or seizure of churches and other places of worships, the replacement of religious leaders with figures deemed loyal to Moscow, and the detention or removal of clergy who refuse to comply.

Former detainees and human rights investigators say some religious leaders have been subjected to severe abuse while in custody, including beatings, prolonged isolation, and other forms of physical and psychological mistreatment.

The Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA) reports that in several cases, priests and pastors have disappeared for weeks or months after being taken for interrogation, while others have been forced to flee or accept removal from their posts.

Observers say religious leaders are often targeted not for specific offences but because of what they represent.

"In the occupied territories, churches are among the few remaining institutions that command moral authority independent of the state," said Mitzi Perdue and Nicole Monette of CEPA.

International bodies warn that these measures — alongside “anti-missionary” prosecutions, censorship of religious literature, and disinformation campaigns — amount to a systematic effort to suppress independent religious life and enforce political loyalty.

Calling for "targeted sanctions" against perpetrators, Perdue and Monette, continued, "What is happening to the clergy in occupied Ukraine is more than another tragic byproduct of war.

"It is a deliberate governance strategy, removing independent moral authority and replacing it with Moscow-loyal figures. Compliance is enforced through terror."

As of early 2026, hundreds of religious communities in occupied regions have registered under Russian law, while others remain unable or unwilling to do so.

Communities linked to Ukrainian church structures, including many Protestant, Catholic and Orthodox groups, are among those most frequently targeted.

Local believers say the result is a climate of uncertainty in which worship continues under the constant threat of inspection, fines or closure.

Russian officials contacted by journalists have declined to explain the legal or security rationale for involving multiple state agencies — including police, prosecutors and security services — in raids on worship services.

CT.

Ephesians 1.

Praise for Spiritual Blessings in Christ.

3) Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ. 4) For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight.

Saturday, February 07, 2026

Indonesia.

Follow me and you’ll be free!

Indonesia podcast


Born into a family of imams and radicalised in the Muslim Brotherhood, Sharif never imagined he would meet Jesus in a solitary prison cell.


In the first of a two-part Voice podcast, Sharif, who now works with a Release International partner in Indonesia, shares his journey to faith in Christ.


To hear his fascinating testimony, click the link below.

In part two of this podcast, available next month, we’ll hear more about the opposition Sharif has faced for his faith, his eventual call to Christian ministry—and his summary of the current situation for Christians in Indonesia.

Birdie.


 

ALL Things.


 

North Koreans.

 

NO To Scapegoating Jews!

Stop scapegoating Jews. It's idiotic and evil! By  Kaeley Harms , Monday, January 26, 2026 There’s a popular teaching regarding Israel i...