Israel orders US-based Christian TV channel off air
Associated Press
June 28, 2020
JERUSALEM —
Israeli regulators on Sunday announced they ordered a U.S.-based
evangelical broadcaster taken off the air, saying the channel hid its
missionary agenda when it applied for a license.
In
his decision, Asher Biton, the chairman of the Cable and Satellite
Broadcasting Council, said he had informed “GOD TV” on Thursday that it
had seven days to stop broadcasting.
“The
channel appeals to Jews with Christian content,” he wrote. “Its
original request,” he said, stated that it was a “station targeting the
Christian population.”
The decision was first reported by the Haaretz daily.
The controversy over
GOD TV’s “Shelanu” station has put Israel and its evangelical Christian
supporters in an awkward position, exposing tensions the two sides have
long papered over.
Evangelical
Christians, particularly in the United States, are among the strongest
supporters of Israel, viewing it as the fulfillment of biblical
prophecy. Some see it as the harbinger of a second coming of Jesus
Christ and the end of days.
Israel
has long welcomed evangelicals’ political and financial support,
especially as their influence over the White House has risen during the
Trump administration, and it has largely shrugged off concerns about any
hidden religious agenda.
But
most Jews view any effort to convert them to Christianity as deeply
offensive, a legacy of centuries of persecution and forced conversion at
the hands of Christian rulers. In part because of those sensitivities,
evangelical Christians, who generally believe salvation can only come
through Jesus and preach the Gospel worldwide, rarely target Jews.
In a statement, Shelanu said it was stunned by what it called Biton’s “unprofessional decision.”
It
said its existing license “stated unequivocally” that it would
broadcast its content in Hebrew to the Israeli public. Most Christians
in the Holy Land speak Arabic. “Therefore it is not at all clear what
was wrong beyond political considerations,” it said.
Ron
Cantor, Shelanu’s Israeli spokesman, said the station would reapply for
a license. He said the station’s management hopes the council will
approve the request “and thus avoids a severe diplomatic incident with
hundreds of millions of pro-Israel evangelical Christians worldwide.”
When
GOD TV reached its seven-year contract with Israel’s main cable
provider earlier this year, it presented itself as producing content for
Christians.
But
in a video message that was later taken down, GOD TV CEO Ward Simpson
suggested its real aim was to convince Jews to accept Jesus as their
messiah.
“God has
supernaturally opened the door for us to take the Gospel of Jesus into
the homes and lives and hearts of his Jewish people,” Simpson said in
the video.
In a subsequent video, Simpson apologized for any offensive remarks and said GOD TV would comply with all regulations.
Freedom
of religion is enshrined in Israeli law, and proselytizing is allowed
as long as missionary activities are not directed at minors and do not
involve economic coercion.
GOD
TV was founded in the U.K. in 1995 and eventually grew into a 24-hour
network with offices in several countries. Its international
broadcasting licenses are held by a Florida-based non-profit. It claims
to reach 300 million households worldwide.
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