There are three devilish misrepresentations of fact in the Adventist Review article:
“The government accepts us as one of the Christian communities in the country,” said Richard Elofer, president of the Adventist Church there and pastor of the Jerusalem congregation. “I know that they know us, we don’t hesitate to communicate with them, and every year I am invited by the president of the state to attend a reception for the [leaders] of the Christian communities.”
Israeli media—not often a friend of Christian churches operating and evangelizing in the country—had very positive things to say about the Seventh-day Adventist Church when its publishing house, “Chaim Veshalom,” or, “Life and Peace,” opened in Jerusalem in 2003. The nation’s oldest newspaper, Haaretz, published a highly favorable report.
The article stressed the industry, honesty, temperate lifestyle, and Sabbathkeeping of Adventist believers, with one Israeli employer, identified only as “Eli,” saying, “They’re very neat and well-groomed. They don’t smoke, they don’t drink. They are excellent, diligent workers and completely honest. I trust them with my eyes closed. I bring them to a work site and don’t have to come back to check on them. Their word is golden.”
Elofer's boasting of the righteousness of the Seventh-day Adventists in Israel is absolutely disgraceful in light of all the suffering going on in the neighboring Occupied Territories. Christ's standard of judgment is determined by how we respond to Christ's mistreated brothers — the very special ones that are hungry, neglected, sick and falsely imprisoned (Matthew 25:31-46).
Thankfully, there are genuine Christians in Israel that express their love for those who are being oppressed and not themselves. They are representing the love of God accurately. See
The Jerusalem Declaration on Christian Zionism.
Elofer asks believers to keep an open mind about today’s Israel: “We would like our Adventist brethren to cease to see Israel as the ‘black sheep’ of the Middle East,” he told the Review.
“Maybe it is not the case in the United States, but recently a survey has been done in all the European countries, asking the question ‘Who is the biggest threat for the peace of the world?’ The majority of the people answered ‘Israel,’ not Iran, not terrorism, not [Osama] bin Laden, but Israel. This answer demonstrates a very high level of anti-Semitism, because rationally Israel is threatening no one, just defending [itself] against dozens of Muslim countries around who would like to see only one thing, its destruction,” Elofer said.
This propaganda of the Zionists is forcefully refuted by the faithful testimonies at
http://www.everythingimportant.org/Zionism/“Among Christians, probably the religious community who has a closer theological connection with Jewish biblical thinking [than any other] is the Adventist Church, and we should always be willing to extend the arm of fellowship to our Jewish friends,” Rodríguez said. But, he added, “political concerns should not be part of that agenda, so that motivation comes to play a significant role in this.”
This is like saying that a friendship between the Seventh-day Adventist Church and
Adolph Hitler could have been based on Hitler's vegetarianism and on his
profession to be a Christian and that Nazi politics, brutal policies and the Nazi war, should have been dismissed as an irrelevant political concern.
As it was demonstrated repeatedly at
http://www.everythingimportant.org/Zionism, many God-fearing Orthodox Jews insist that Judaism has nothing to do with Zionism.