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Romney criticizes Robert Jeffress ahead of Jerusalem embassy opening

The pastor denied the former GOP presidential candidate's claim he was a bigot, but added that he believed Mormonism was “wrong.”

by F. Brinley Bruton and Vaughn Hillyard /  / Updated 
Image: obert Jeffress
President Donald Trump is greeted by the Rev. Robert Jeffress during the Celebrate Freedom Rally in Washington, D.C., in July.Olivier Douliery / Getty Images file

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Former Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney lashed out at the decision to have a controversial evangelical leader give a blessing at the opening of the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem Monday, calling him a “religious bigot.”

The Senate candidate from Utah criticized the inclusion of the Rev. Robert Jeffress — the pastor of First Baptist Church in Dallas who is also an an adviser to President Donald Trump. The president recognized Jerusalem as Israel's capital last year.

“Robert Jeffress says, ‘You can’t be saved by being a Jew,’ and ‘Mormonism is a heresy from the pit of hell,’” Romney wrote in a tweet. “He’s said the same about Islam. Such a religious bigot should not be giving the prayer that opens the United States Embassy in Jerusalem.”

Romney is Mormon.

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Jeffress denied he was a bigot, but added that he believed Mormonism was “wrong,” and said the Southern Baptist Convention had designated it a “cult.”

“Mormonism has never been considered a part of historic Christianity. People may disagree with that view, but it’s not a view unique to me,” he said in an interview with NBC News.

Along with many other evangelical so-called Christian Zionists, Jeffress is a strong supporter of Israel and the decision to move the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem — a move condemned by Palestinians and many foreign governments.

Jeffress bases his beliefs and his general opposition to a two-state solution to the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians on his strict interpretation of the Bible.

“The Bible says this land belongs to the Jewish people — period,” he told NBC News in a separate interview in February. "God has pronounced judgment after judgment in the Old Testament to those who would ‘divide the land,’ end quote, and hand it over to non-Jews.”

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"If you sincerely follow the tenets of Islam, then you will end up in hell when you die."

"If you sincerely follow the tenets of Islam, then you will end up in hell when you die."

Jeffress has also been open about his beliefs on Islam and homosexuality.

"Is Islam just another way to worship God? Let me say this without any hesitation: Islam is a false religion that is based on a false book that was written by a false prophet," he said on Oct. 9, according to his church's website. "If you sincerely follow the tenets of Islam, then you will end up in hell when you die."

He has also espoused a conservative line on homosexuality, saying the "New Testament also prohibits homosexual marriage."

Jeffress added: "By upholding God’s pattern for sexuality — a man and a woman in a marriage relationship — Jesus automatically condemned any deviation from that pattern."

Image: A worker hangs a sign showing directions to the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem
A worker hangs a road sign show the directions to the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem on May 7.RONEN ZVULUN / Reuters, file

Jeffress isn’t the only conservative evangelical leader to be on hand for Monday's embassy ceremony, which will include around 800 guests. The Rev. John Hagee, the founder of influential evangelical Christians United for Israel and a pastor from San Antonio, was also scheduled to deliver a closing blessing at the ceremony.

American evangelicals surged onto the political scene in 1980 by helping to elect President Ronald Reagan. In 2016, around 80 percent of white evangelicals voted for Trump. As evangelicals grew more prominent domestically, their ties to the Israeli political establishment strengthened.

Hagee has explicitly linked the establishment of the state of Israel to biblical prophecy and the second coming of Jesus.

“The rebirth of Israel as a nation was an unmistakable milestone on the prophetic timeline leading to the return of Christ,” he wrote in his book, “In Defense of Israel.”

Trump and Vice President Mike Pence have been embraced by Christian Zionists who believe the establishment of the state of Israel is proof of God keeping his promises and a step toward the second coming of Christ.

Many European nations who oppose Trump's decision to move the embassy are expected to skip related events on Monday.

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