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OPINION

Has the American Church Lost Its Way? The Church Pew’s Quiet Contribution to Antisemitism

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Has the American Church Lost Its Way? The Church Pew’s Quiet Contribution to Antisemitism
AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

Antisemitism is rising globally. Violent attacks make headlines for a day and then fade. What receives far less attention is how casually anti-Jewish sentiment has begun slipping into evangelical conversations.

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Recent surveys show the scale of the problem. Ninety-one percent of American Jews say they feel less safe in the United States because of violent antisemitic attacks in the past year. Eighty-six percent say antisemitism has increased since the Hamas terrorist attacks on October 7, 2023. Nearly one-third say they have personally been targeted by antisemitism—online or in person—within the last year.

But statistics alone cannot explain what is happening inside the American church.

"That concern is one of the reasons why I joined Ronald Daw, executive producer, Andrew Klavan, writer, and Cyrus Nowrasteh, director, in bringing The Covenant, a series centered on the Hebrew Scriptures, to life. Our hope is simple: to help modern audiences rediscover the Old Testament story that shaped the faith of Jesus and the early church.

Because something has gone wrong. That casual contempt reveals something deeper. We have become increasingly detached from the Old Testament.

Many churches move quickly to the Gospels and Epistles while neglecting the Torah and the Prophets. The result is a generation of believers who love Jesus but have almost no understanding of the covenant story He stepped into and fulfilled.

When contempt for the Jewish people shows up among Christians, it exposes a theological problem before it exposes a political one.

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The harshest words I heard in Israel didn't come from terrorists. They came from Christians.

My wife and I traveled to Israel for the first time this past December. We walked through Jerusalem, stood at the empty tomb, visited the Nova massacre site, and met families who lost children on October 7. I wept with the families of fallen soldiers. We sat with former hostages and with parents whose sons and daughters never came home.

Then I posted a simple photo of myself standing beside the Israeli flag.

Within minutes, my comments and inbox filled with something I did not expect: anger.

Not political debate.

Not disagreement.

Something darker.

The attacks didn't come from secular critics. They came from self-described Bible-believing Christians.

One ministry leader messaged me publicly: "You're an idiot." A woman commented, "If the Jews haven't found Christ in 2,000 years, then we are the new chosen people."

I was stunned.

I was raised in a family that believed Christians should honor the people through whom the Scriptures came. But what I witnessed online suggested something has shifted.

Jesus did not distance Himself from Israel's Scriptures. He embodied them.

When Satan tempted Him in the wilderness, Satan quoted Psalm 91. Jesus answered not with something new, but with Deuteronomy. Three times in Matthew 4, Jesus responded to temptation by quoting the Torah. On the cross, He cried out the opening words of Psalm 22: "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"

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Jesus' vocabulary was saturated with the Hebrew Scriptures.

The apostle Paul warned Gentile believers in Romans 11 not to become arrogant toward the Jewish people. He used the image of an olive tree. Gentile believers, he said, are grafted in. We do not replace the root; we share in its nourishment.

But instead of gratitude and reverence, some believers show arrogance. When the Old Testament is neglected, that humility disappears.

Without the covenant with Abraham, Israel becomes irrelevant.

Without the prophets, exile is misread as rejection.

Without Romans 9-11, Gentile believers forget that they were grafted into a story that began long before them.

The result is subtle but dangerous.

The Jewish people are no longer seen as the carriers of promise but as obstacles to overcome. The language shifts. The tone hardens. Replacement theology—sometimes unnamed, sometimes unexamined—creeps in.

Loving the Jewish people does not require blind allegiance to any government. Political policies can be debated. Military decisions can be scrutinized. But contempt for the Jewish people is incompatible with Christian faith.

If your theology produces disdain for the people through whom God gave the Law, the Prophets, and ultimately the Messiah, something is broken.

Standing in Jerusalem, I saw the clock marking the seconds, minutes, and hours since the hostages were taken on October 7, 2023.

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These are not intellectual constructs. These are sons and daughters, wives and sisters.

When the final body was returned, and the clock stopped, I watched Itzik Gvili, the father of Ran Gvili, standing over his casket. He said, "You had every opportunity to stay home. What did you tell me? 'I won't leave my friends to fight alone.'"

Then, with tears in his eyes, he told his son he was proud of him.

These are not abstractions. They are the living descendants of the people who preserved the Scriptures Christians claim to cherish.

The antidote to antisemitism is not political tribalism. It is biblical literacy. It is remembering that Christianity did not begin in Rome or Washington. It began in Jerusalem.

It is teaching our children not only the Sermon on the Mount, but the covenant with Abraham. Not only the cross, but the Exodus. Not only the Resurrection, but the promises that preceded it.

That conviction led me to become involved with "The Covenant," a TV series similar to "The Chosen," designed to help viewers rediscover the Hebrew Scriptures through stories that connect the ancient world to our own.

Not because the Church needs new content. But because it needs old roots.

When Christians immerse themselves in the Torah and the Prophets, they recover the covenant framework that shaped Jesus, the apostles, and the early church.

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If we forget the roots, we should not be surprised when the fruit turns bitter. The Church does not replace Israel.

It is grafted in by grace.

And grace leaves no room for contempt.

Ryan Dobson is a bestselling author of six published books, an internationally sought-after speaker, and a leading voice in modern donor development and philanthropic strategy. As the founder of Dobson Philanthropic and host of the Fundraising is Dead podcast, Ryan is known for challenging outdated fundraising models and replacing them with strategies rooted in trust, gratitude, and long-term partnership.

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