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- “Christ is King” is biblical truth, but it is being weaponized by some as a signal to target Jews and silence pro-Israel voices.
- The church must distinguish between legitimate policy criticism of Israel and spiritual hatred fueled by conspiracy and antisemitic narratives.
- The culture shift is visible as audiences reject vulgar entertainment and gravitate toward values driven alternatives.
- The fight over ICE masks and enforcement reveals political intimidation tactics and a public increasingly demanding law and order.
In the middle of a volatile news cycle, three words are being used like a match near gasoline: Christ is King. Biblical truth? Absolutely. Pure worship? Yes. But when that phrase gets weaponized to target Jews, to silence pro-Israel voices, or to baptize hatred, it stops being a confession and becomes a cudgel. Today we are talking about the Religious Liberty Commission clash over Israel and Gaza, the growing divide inside the church, and why this moment demands discernment. We will also examine the cultural shift that is cracking the NFL’s stranglehold and the political panic as ICE enforcement becomes the new target of outrage. Watch more on the Real Life Network.
Christ Is King, but Context Is Everything
Let me say it plainly. Christ is King. I believe it. I worship Him. I am a Jewish follower of Yeshua living in Israel, and I am not interested in performative slogans.
But context matters because history matters.
When someone uses “Christ is King” as a sneer at Jews, or as a signal to extremist movements, or as a way to shout down anyone who defends Israel, you are watching a sacred truth get twisted into a weapon. The same words can be worship, or they can be a dog whistle. If you do not understand that distinction, you are going to get played.
At the Religious Liberty Commission, we saw the fault line in real time. Seth Dillon challenged the growing influence of voices on the right who treat Israel as the villain and treat Jews as fair game. A fair question surfaced in the exchange: is saying “Christ is King” antisemitic? No. Not inherently. But the phrase has been co-opted by some to communicate something darker: put the Jews in their place, they are the other, they deserve what is coming.
And if you think I am being dramatic, look at the responses I have received. I have been told to “get out,” called a “Zionist” as if it were a slur, and mocked for being a Jewish follower of Jesus. That is not theology. That is hatred wearing a church costume.
You can criticize Israeli policy without hating Jews, but you cannot baptize hatred and call it Christian. When “Christ is King” is used to mock Jews, it is not evangelism, it is intimidation. If you claim to follow the Jewish Messiah while denigrating His people, something is spiritually broken.
Israel, Gaza, and the Line Between Criticism and Spiritual Hatred
Here is the line that needs to be drawn clearly. You can disagree with Netanyahu. You can debate foreign aid. You can question military strategy in Gaza. None of that automatically makes you antisemitic.
But when people label Israel demonic, spread conspiracies about Jews, or recycle modern blood libels, that is not policy critique. That is spiritual hatred. It is the same poison that has resurfaced in every generation, wearing a different disguise.
This is why the question raised at that hearing matters. “Are you willing to condemn what Israel has done in Gaza?” That framing assumes the verdict. It forces a loyalty oath to a narrative. The response from Shabbos Kestenbaum cut through it. He rejected the genocide label and pointed to the true genocidal intent revealed on October 7, when Hamas sought to murder as many Jews as possible, men, women, and children.
That does not erase tragedy. It does not deny suffering. It insists on moral clarity.
The church must be able to say, “We can debate policy,” while also saying, “We will not excuse terrorism, reward antisemitic narratives, or ignore what October 7 revealed about Hamas.” If believers cannot hold those truths together, the vacuum will be filled with propaganda.
Culture Is Shifting and the Border Fight Proves It
Now pivot with me, because something else is happening that goes beyond football. The NFL’s cultural dominance is cracking. Millions of Americans are tired of vulgarity and confusion being served as entertainment, and a competing halftime broadcast drew viewers away in significant numbers. That is not a minor blip. It is a sign.
We are also seeing a shift in the politics surrounding border enforcement. The same voices that once embraced masks now oppose them when federal immigration officers wear them, even though those masks protect agents and their families from harassment and targeting. A federal judge blocked California from enforcing a ban on ICE masks, pointing directly to constitutional violations. The attempt to spin that ruling does not change the reality.
Meanwhile, polling consistently shows that majorities of Americans support deporting those who are in the country illegally. That is not extremism. That is a public that is growing weary of disorder. Claims that ICE is “kidnapping citizens” collapse under basic scrutiny, yet they continue to circulate because misinformation works on those who do not have time to verify it.
Then there are the reports that should concern every American. Allegations that overseas individuals have exploited weaknesses in voter systems to register and vote. If verified, that is not just election fraud. It is a national security threat.
Across Israel debates, culture battles, and border policy fights, the common thread is clear: truth is either your currency, or you are bankrupt.
That is why this show exists. Not to chase outrage, but to speak clearly about what matters.
For more analysis on Israel, antisemitism, cultural shifts, and the battle for biblical truth, watch and share the Daniel Cohen Show on the Real Life Network.
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Daniel Cohen hosts the "Daniel Cohen Show" exclusively on the Real Life Network. A Jewish follower of Jesus and three-time Emmy award-winning journalist, Cohen delivers the news from Israel, reporting on today's top headlines with a biblical worldview.




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