Every year Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein and the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews raises about $100 million, mostly from evangelical Christians in the United States, for distribution to social-welfare projects in Israel and the former Soviet Union. This is a staggering sum, making the fellowship arguably the largest foundation for Jews in need in the world.
 
One would think that we in the Jewish community would show immense gratitude for such love. I therefore found it extraordinary, not to mention embarrassing, to hear that there is a growing campaign among elements in the Israeli rabbinate to discredit the organization and forbid Jewish organizations from benefiting from its funds.
 
The worst of all character traits in Judaism is to be an ingrate. Denying the goodness that others perform on your behalf leads to a closing of the human heart. No one wants to be taken for granted.
 
So great is the emphasis on appreciation in our religion that our greatest prophet, Moses, is commanded by God not to strike the Nile River and turn it into blood in the first plague against the Egyptians because that same river had saved his life when he was a baby.
 
Later, in plague number three, God will again warn Moses against smiting the dust of Egypt and turning it into lice because the dust had saved his life when he had to bury the body of a murderous Egyptian taskmaster.
 
Imagine that. A man who speaks to God face to face is told he must show thanks to water and dust. But such is the extent to which Jewish values demand gratitude.
 
Over the past two decades evangelical Christians have emerged as Israel’s most staunch and reliable friends. Pastors like John Hagee, my friend Pat Robertson and countless others have galvanized colossal Christian support for Israel.
 
Even in the peak period of suicide bombings during the Second Intifada, when tourism to Israel fell off a cliff, evangelical Christians still came in their millions. The same is true of stalwart Christian political support for Israel. While President Obama continues to bully Israel over apartments in Israel’s undivided and eternal capital, Jerusalem, evangelical Christians have a litmus test for their elected leaders: Don’t support Israel? You’re out.
 
As I write these lines, former president George W. Bush is enjoying something of a renaissance with the publication of his new book, Decision Points. Bush, by almost any standard the best friend Israel ever had in the White House, writes at the beginning of his book how he turned his life over to Jesus, and there can be no question that there is a direct link between his deep Christian faith and his love and unyielding support for Israel against those who seek its annihilation.
 
I am well aware of our immense differences with the Christian evangelical community. I would venture to say that I have conducted more debates over the past decade against leading Christian scholars and missionaries than any other American rabbi (most of which are available on YouTube).
 
Jesus was an observant Jew who ate kosher, honored the Sabbath, donned tefillin, insisted on the indivisible unity of God, and fought for the independence of the Jewish nation against the brutal oppression of Rome, beliefs for which he was ultimately crucified.
 
   It would behoove Christians to realize they have much more to gain from learning about the authentic historical Jesus from Jews than from any misguided attempts at converting them. Indeed, not only must these attempts be emphatically resisted by the Jewish community with overwhelming scholarship, but Christians should learn from Jews to reject any deification of Jesus, which he, as a Pharisee, would have seen as the ultimate sacrilege (and which is the subject of my upcoming book on the Jewish Jesus). They should follow Jesus as teacher rather than a god.
 
But whatever our theological differences with evangelicals, none of this negates the unparalleled kindness and friendship they show Jews and the Jewish community. To say they do this merely to convert us, or because gathering Jews to Israel will usher in the apocalypse, is to perpetrate a sacrilegious act of character assassination. Bible-believing Christians support Israel out of feelings of deep love and brotherhood.
 
The man more responsible than anyone else for building this bridge between Christians and Jews is the aforementioned Rabbi Eckstein, a man whose efforts, with Christian support, feeds thousands of hungry Jewish children and Jewish elderly every day in Israel and abroad.
 

Israel is a nation that dwells alone, with few friends and many prejudiced enemies. Rather than rabbis and lay leaders attacking Christians as having nefarious motives for their charity, we should offer thanks and gratitude to hard-working Americans of faith who believe, as the Bible says, that through Israel all the earth is blessed.

 

 

 

   Rabbi Shmuley Boteach heads This World: The Values Network, which seeks to heal America through universal Jewish values. A best-selling author of 24 books, his most recent work is “Renewal: A Guide to the Values-Filled Life.”

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Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, "America's Rabbi," whom The Washington Post calls “the most famous Rabbi in America,” is the international bestselling author of 30 books including his most recent “The Israel Warrior.” Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.