Christians, Jews March in Streets of St. Louis

Share:

Urging Christians and Jews to “embrace their common ancestry,” a pro-Israel group organized a march in downtown St. Louis Sunday, during which nearly 1,000 people walked several blocks to the Mississippi River to pray for an hour under the city’s famous Gateway Arch monument.

Organizers of the “March Through the Arch” called the event a “religious and political activist demonstration” that stressed the solidarity of the international Judeo-Christian community with the nation and people of Israel.

“Christians used to feel separated from Jews,” said Angus Wootten, founder of the Tennessee-based Messianic Israel Alliance, which sponsored the event. “[But] today, millions of Christians have embraced their identity as brothers to the Jews and part of Israel.”

Some local Jews expressed caution concerning the purposes of the event, since international Jewish-Christian relations have historically been strained over matters such as Christian proselytizing. But organizers said the agenda of the march was purely prayer.

“We just wanted to get everybody to stand and support Israel together and focus on what we have in common rather than what divides us,” John Diffenderfer, Messianic Israel Alliance spokesman, told Charisma.

“People from both Jewish and Christian backgrounds [came],” he said. “But it was primarily … an ecumenical event. We weren’t out to convert anybody.”

Instead, Diffenderfer said the rally consisted of prayers of repentance over the divisions that have existed among various ethnic groups through the years, as well as between Jews and Christians.

He said that representatives of the African-American, Native American and Caucasian communities participated in praying as well as Jews and Christians from as far away as South Africa, Australia and Mexico. “We repented for the generations and for all that has gone wrong over the centuries—the last 2,000 years, really,” Diffenderfer said. “We humbled ourselves so that … God [could] provide unity.”

According to the group’s founder, the location and direction of the march also held special significance. “The arch is symbolic in that it signified the westward expansion of civilization,” Wootten said. “Biblical prophecy states that the people of God will return to the land of Israel from the West. We [marched] east, toward Israel and through the Gateway Arch, to indicate our impending return.”

Share:

Leave a Reply


More Spiritual Content
Hezbollah leader Nasrallah Vows to Deliver ‘Just Punishment’ for Israel’s ‘Act of War’
Church Launches Tuition-Free School After Public Library Outrage
Fort Worth Pastor Alleges Wrongful Termination for ‘Inappropriate Images’
Is Russell Brand the Prayer Warrior the World Needs?
Steven Lawson Resigns from OnePassion Ministries
MorningStar on the Defensive Amid Legal Battles
Epic Sky Events: Blood Moon, ‘Comet of the Century’ and Ring of Fire Eclipse All in One Month
Morning Rundown: Steven Lawson Ousted From Dallas Church Following an ‘Inappropriate Relationship’
Rare Discovery from Ancient Egypt Points to Exodus
Understanding Israel’s Pager Attack on Hezbollah
previous arrow
next arrow
Shadow

Most Popular Posts

Latest Videos
62.8K Subscribers
838 Videos
5.9M Views
Share
CM News

FREE
VIEW