Opinion
David
French
Whatever
This Is, It Isn’t Anti-Zionism
Feb. 15,
2026
David
French
By David
French
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/15/opinion/christian-zionism-prejean-boller-candace-owens.html
If you
ever wanted a succinct explanation for more than 2,000 years of vicious
Christian antisemitism, all you had to do was to tune in to a meeting of the
Trump administration’s Religious Liberty Commission last Monday.
The
commission itself, which is housed in the Department of Justice, is supposed to
“advise the White House Faith Office and the Domestic Policy Council on
religious liberty policies in the United States.”
The
commission contains a quintessentially Trumpian mix of serious people,
sycophants and pop culture influencers. For example, one of the members is Dr.
Phil — a man who’s hardly renowned for his expertise on religious liberty.
President
Trump also named Carrie Prejean Boller, the former Miss California USA who had
a brief moment of stardom, backlash and controversy in 2009, when she said
during a question-and-answer session at the pageant that she believed that
marriage was between a man and a woman.
After her
comments, seminude photographs of her emerged, which — as The Times reported at
the time — she blamed on “disreputable photographers.” Then, a month after
standing by her, Trump (along with other pageant organizers) fired her,
alleging that she’d violated her contract by failing to perform her duties.
Trump’s
comments were blunt: “I told Carrie she needed to get back to work and honor
her contract.”
Apparently,
all is forgiven. Last year, Trump appointed Boller to the commission. It was
another odd choice. Apart from facing public scorn for her stance on marriage,
she has no particular experience with religious liberty, either. Nor was she
all that prominent in the world of conservative influencers.
But she
likes Trump, and in this administration that’s all the qualification you need.
On
Monday, she arrived at the hearing loaded for bear. In a series of contentious
exchanges, she asked if “certain parts of the Bible” could now be considered
antisemitic for “referring to the killing and crucifixion of our Lord and
Savior, Jesus Christ,” defended Candace Owens and Tucker Carlson — two of the
most prominent sources of antisemitic propaganda in the United States — and
attacked Zionism as incompatible with her Catholic faith.
In the
days since, she’s doubled down. As her social media following soared, she
reposted a supportive tweet from Owens, in which Owens declared that Boller was
being attacked for refusing to “support the mass slaughter and rape of innocent
children for occult Baal worshipers.” On Tuesday, Boller posted, “Be a good
little Goyim and give me a follow.”
In a
defiant interview with The Atlantic’s Yair Rosenberg, Boller refused to disavow
even the most grotesque and blatant antisemitic statements from Owens,
including Owens’s claims that “Jewish supremacists had everything to do with
the Civil War in America” and that “Jewish people were in control of the slave
trade. They’ve buried a lot of it, but it’s there and you can find it.”
Boller
responded to a tweet from Ted Cruz by saying, “Ted, in Catholic theology the
true Israel is the church, not a political movement. You Zionists have always
hated Catholics who reject Zionism and don’t support 1948 Israel.”
The
chairman of the commission, Dan Patrick, the lieutenant governor of Texas, said
he was removing her from the commission, but Boller was defiant. “I remain on
this commission until I hear from the president,” she told Rosenberg, and she
had her own request of the president:
“I want
the president to admit: Is he ‘America First’ or ‘Israel First’?”
I’m
sharing this sad background not because Boller is particularly influential or
powerful, but because she perfectly encapsulates the rising tide of
antisemitism in the United States. Gross bigotry isn’t ending her career; it’s
the rocket fuel that’s propelling her to stardom.
Boller is
also, ironically enough, showing the necessity for a sane Christian Zionism.
She’s demonstrating exactly why I have long identified myself as a Christian
Zionist.
Before I
explain further, let me offer two important caveats. First, there is no
definition of “Christian Zionist” that should excuse, rationalize or justify
any form of injustice committed by the modern state of Israel. There is no form
of Christian Zionism that should mandate support for the policies of the
Netanyahu government.
I
unequivocally support Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state, but I have
also written repeatedly and critically about Israel’s tactics in its war on
Gaza, which I believe have prolonged the conflict and created extraordinary and
unnecessary human suffering.
Jewish
lives aren’t more precious than Palestinian lives, and any form of advocacy for
Israel that treats Palestinians as any less deserving of safety and security
than Israelis isn’t just un-Christian; it’s anti-Christian. It directly
contradicts the teachings of Scripture, which place Jews and Gentiles in a
position of equality.
Second,
internal Christian debates about whether the modern state of Israel is a
fulfillment of biblical prophecy — as interesting as they can be — should be
irrelevant to American foreign policy, which should be based both on American
interests and American commitments to international justice and human rights.
But
historic Christian antisemitism is rooted in a historic Christian argument, and
it requires a specifically Christian argument in response.
Put in
its most simple form, Christian antisemitism is rooted in two propositions —
that Jews bear the guilt for Christ’s death (“Jews killed Jesus”), and that
when the majority of Jews rejected Jesus (who was a Jew, as were all his early
apostles), that God replaced his covenant with the children of Abraham with a
new covenant with Christians. This idea of a new covenant that excludes the
Jewish people is called “supersessionism” or “replacement theology.”
Put the
two concepts together — “Jews killed Jesus” and “Christians are the chosen
people now” — and you’ve got the recipe for more than 2,000 years of brutal,
religiously motivated oppression.
Boller is
a recent convert to Catholicism, and she — like Candace Owens — wields her
newfound faith like a sword. But perhaps they both need to spend a little more
time learning and a lot less time talking.
First,
let’s put to rest the indefensible idea that “the Jews” killed Christ. As the
Second Vatican Council taught, “The Jewish authorities and those who followed
their lead pressed for the death of Christ; still, what happened in his passion
cannot be charged against all the Jews, without distinction, then alive, nor
against the Jews of today.”
This
isn’t a statement of high theological principle as much as basic common sense.
Convicting an entire people, for all time, of the crimes of a few religious
leaders is a moral monstrosity that runs counter to every tenet of Christian
justice.
Second,
Boller’s own church teaches that there is a deep bond between Christians and
Jews. Last year, Robert P. George, a noted Catholic political philosopher at
Princeton, wrote a powerful essay in Sapir, a Jewish journal of ideas, in which
he described the relationship between the Jewish people and the Catholic Church
as an “unbreakable covenant.”
As George
writes, Pope Benedict XVI explicitly rejected the idea that the Jewish people
“ceased to be the bearer of the promises of God.” Pope John Paul II said that
the Catholic Church has “a relationship” with Judaism “which we do not have
with any other religion.” He also said that Judaism is “intrinsic” and not
“extrinsic” to Christianity, and that Jews were Christians’ “elder brothers” in
the faith.
Indeed,
paragraph 121 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church states that “The Old
Testament is an indispensable part of Sacred Scripture. Its books are divinely
inspired and retain a permanent value, for the Old Covenant has never been
revoked.”
I don’t
believe for a moment that the Catholic view is the only expression of Christian
orthodoxy. I know quite a few Protestant and Catholic supersessionists who are
not antisemitic, but I highlight the words of Pope John Paul II and Pope
Benedict XVI because they starkly demonstrate the incompatibility of
antisemitism with Christian orthodoxy.
But one
doesn’t have to agree with Catholic teaching (or its Protestant analogues) to
be fairly called a Zionist — a Christian Zionist, even — because one believes
in the right of Israel to exist as a Jewish state.
The
reason is rooted in Scripture’s commitment to equal dignity for all people,
regardless of ethnicity, class or sex. As an extension of that commitment, no
group of people should be subjected to abuse or persecution — much less
genocide.
In this
formulation, a so-called Christian Zionist would also likely be a Christian
Kurdist (not a phrase you hear every day) or have a Christian commitment to
Palestinian statehood. Kurds and Palestinians have also been historically
oppressed, denied a home and deprived of the right to defend themselves.
In those
circumstances, statehood isn’t a matter of fulfilling prophecies; it’s about
safety and security. It’s about self-determination and the preservation of
basic human rights. And if you think that can be done without supporting
statehood, then I’d challenge you to consider the long and terrible historical
record.
A
consistent Christian Zionist would oppose both the heinous massacre of Jews on
Oct. 7, 2023, and the aggressive, violent expansion of settlements in the West
Bank. He would stand resolutely against Iranian efforts to exterminate the
Jewish state and against any Israeli war crimes in Gaza.
Embracing
the idea that the modern state of Israel is a direct fulfillment of biblical
prophecies and therefore must be supported by the United States for theological
reasons can lead us to dangerous places — to a belief, in essence, in permanent
Israeli righteousness, no matter the nation’s conduct and no matter the
character of its government.
But the
opposite idea — that Christians have replaced the Jews in the eyes of God, and
there is no longer any special purpose for Jews in God’s plan — has its own
profound dangers. It creates a sense of righteousness in religious persecution,
and it has caused untold suffering throughout human history.
The
better Christian view rejects both dangerous extremes, recognizes the
incalculable dignity and worth of every human being, and is Zionist in the
sense that it believes that one of history’s most persecuted groups deserves a
national home.
And since
Christians have persecuted Jews so viciously in the past (and some still do
today), we have a special responsibility to make amends, to repair the damage
that the church has done. That begins by turning to the new Christian
antisemites and shouting “No!” Ancient hatreds born from ancient heresies have
no place in the church today.


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