Long‑run Christian philosemitism shapes US policy

Updated: 2025.12.02 4D ago 1 sources
Support for a Jewish state in American politics is not merely an outgrowth of late‑20th‑century evangelical eschatology but rests on a much older tradition of Christian philosemitism that dates back to the colonial era and has periodically informed U.S. public opinion and elites. Treating contemporary 'Christian Zionism' as a single, recent movement obscures how religious identity and historical sympathy structure bipartisan coalitions for Israel. — Reframing pro‑Israel sentiment as rooted in long‑term religious culture changes how we analyze foreign‑policy alliances, media narratives (e.g., Tucker Carlson controversies), and the political salience of criticism of Israel—shifting debates from transient partisan maneuvers to deep cultural formation.

Sources

Israel, America and the End of the World
Samuel Goldman 2025.12.02 100% relevant
Samuel Goldman’s podcast and his book God’s Country are the concrete anchors: he explicitly disputes Tucker Carlson’s timeline and traces continuous threads of Christian philosemitism through American history.
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