Christians the largest group of Zionists, US evangelical says at Oct. 7 memorial

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Christians the largest group of Zionists, US evangelical says at Oct. 7 memorial
Caption: U.S. evangelical leader Mike Evans, founder of the Friends of Zion Museum, at an Oct. 7 memorial event at the museum in Jerusalem on Oct. 6, 2024. Credit: Courtesy.

JNS

 Israel’s "enemies speak loud but are small in number compared to her friends," Mike Evans says.

The vast majority of Zionists in the world are Christians who unequivocally support the State of Israel and the war against Iran and its terrorist proxies, an American evangelical leader said in Jerusalem on Sunday.

Mike Evans's remarks at a memorial ceremony marking the first anniversary of the war against Hamas reflect the faith-based support of tens of millions of evangelical Christians in the United States alone.

“Israel’s friends are significantly larger than her enemies; her enemies speak loud but are small in number compared to her friends,” Evans told JNS, decrying the young Christians even among evangelicals who, "braced in social justice Gospel," have turned away from Israel.

“The vast majority of Zionists in the world are not Jewish but stand united, unconditionally with the Jewish people in Israel,” he said at the ceremony held at the Friends of Zion Museum, which he founded. “The world is in a battle between light and darkness, and Israel must win.”

The two-hour event, which was broadcast around the world to Christian supporters, including through two of the largest evangelical denominations, the Southern Baptist Convention and the Assemblies of God, brought together survivors of the Oct. 7 Hamas massacre, Israeli search and rescue officials, families of hostages, bereaved family members and residents of Israeli farming communities near the Gaza Strip.

“I had seen bodies but this was something completely different—deliberately done by human beings, not animals,” recounted Nurit Cohen, a search and rescue officials from the Zaka disaster victim identification organization who bagged hundreds of bodies from the massacre.

She noted that on the day of the attack, the predominantly male Orthodox Jewish rescue group volunteers had less than 70 seconds to bag each body. “We saw evilness; the worst side of humans,” Cohen said at the ceremony, welling up in tears.

Supernova music festival survivor Noam Lev-Ram said, “I’m still smelling burnt bodies and hearing shooting, but I survived and I am here.”

Ilan Gilboa-Dalal, whose 23-year-old son Guy is still a hostage in Gaza, said, “There are dark forces and evil around that just want to kill us.”

“What you are doing gives me hope,” Michal Greenglick, whose 26-year-old brother Capt. Shauli Greenglick was killed fighting in the war with his IDF reserve unit, told the dozens of Christian supporters of Israel in attendance at the Jerusalem museum. “It doesn’t mean I am not sad, but I cannot lose my hope.”

“We are giving you back the gift you gave to the world,” said Bishop Robert Stearns, founder of New York’s Eagles' Wings Ministries. “You gave the world—in the Psalms, in the writings of Isaiah, in Einstein, in Nobel prizes—the gift of hope.”


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