The events of September 11 and the war on terrorism have given Americans a new consciousness of the Middle East. As a result, this has often led to the questioning of U.S. support for Israel. Also, despite many Christians' support, some Christians are asking,"Why should we support this tiny coutntry?" Here's just a few short reasons:
Israel has a prophetic role. Israel still has a place in God’s timetable, and He is fulfilling His promise to Israel by bringing Jewish immigrants back to “the Land.” There is in the formation of the Israeli state a seed planted that will soon become a spiritual harvest. The message of Messiah was first proclaimed in Israel, and has spread throughout the world. One day the circle will be complete and we will once again see Israel as the "light unto the nations."
Israel is a friend and ally. As a democratic republic, Israel is the sole representative of free society in a region that does not cherish individual liberty. For this, they deserve our support. Despite historical oppression, the Jewish people have had a significant positive influence on western civilization, especially the United States. This has been in our legal systems, financial systems, the fine arts, science, medicine, civil rights, entertainment, and political leadership. For all practical purposes, due to our shared values, Israel is family.
Israel is misunderstood. The media often misinterprets conflicts and events in Israel. Often portrayed as land-hungry oppressors, the Israelis actually do much out of self-defense. Many don’t realize that, in 1948, it was the United Nations that allowed for an Israeli state. The Palestinians, who have rejected multiple offers of land, refused to form their own state alongside Israel, and instead chose war. Five Arab nations invaded Israel in its infancy, and were defeated. Consequently, Israel then seized land that was used strategically against them. The rest is, in fact, history.
Israel and America are both hated. At the root of this conflict is anti-semitism and hatred for western culture. The hatred of the Jewish people goes back to Biblical times, and the hatred of the west may be traced back nearly 1000 years when the Crusades took place. Bin-Laden himself used Crusader language in describing American forces, and Arab newspaper columns and cartoons frequently show the west as under the puppet-string control of the Jews. Israel sits in the center of the Islamic world as a symbol of those two great enemies (Judaism and western civilization), and she is therefore hated by many of her own neighbors. America knows now, like Israel, what it is like to be hated.
Being pro-Israel does not mean that you have to agree with every decision made by the Israeli government. It just means that you defend their right to exist, including defending themselves against the perpetual onsluaght of their many enemies. As Christians, regardless of how we feel about Israel politically, we are called to love the people of Israel. In addition, due to the many believers there, Paul says...
For if the Gentiles have shared in the Jews' spiritual blessings, they owe it to the Jews to share with them their material blessings.
(Romans 15:27 NIV)

