Key Points
- Rising antisemitism is not only a political or cultural issue, but a moral and spiritual concern for Christians.
- The October 7 Hamas attack accelerated global antisemitism, fueling online hate, campus unrest, and hostility toward Jewish communities.
- Recent surveys show antisemitic attitudes are increasing worldwide, especially among younger generations.
- Holocaust denial and historical ignorance make antisemitism more dangerous by weakening society’s ability to recognize and resist hatred.
- Christians are called to speak truth, reject anti-Jewish hatred, pray, teach accurate history, and stand with Jewish people against violence and evil.
Why Is Rising Antisemitism a Christian Concern
Antisemitism is surging around the world. It is at epidemic levels throughout the Middle East where Jew-hatred is entrenched in everyday life. Europe is experiencing pre-Holocaust levels of hostility due to far-right parties and an influx of immigrants from Muslim countries. And the United States is experiencing a deeply terrifying surge on the internet, on college campuses, and within both the far right and progressive political movements.
For Christians, rising antisemitism is not only a political or cultural crisis but a moral and spiritual call to defend truth, oppose hatred, and stand with the Jewish people. This crisis did not happen overnight; it is the culmination of a steady, concerning climb.
How Did October 7 Accelerate Global Antisemitism
The definitive turning point for this recent surge in antisemitism was October 7, 2023, when Hamas infiltrated southern Israel, massacring more than 1,200 people and taking over 250 hostages into Gaza. In the wake of Israel’s military response, anti-Israel protests skyrocketed across American college campuses and globally on social media.
What Did the Data Show before October 7
However, before October 7, signs of trouble were already percolating. A January 2023 study published by The London Centre for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism—in partnership with the Anti-Defamation League and the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago—revealed the number of Americans harboring extensive antisemitic prejudice has doubled since 2019, reaching the “highest levels in decades.”[1] Interestingly, that report showed a strong correlation between anti-Israel sentiments and antisemitism, with the younger, more progressive generation proving particularly susceptible to the rhetoric.[2]
That hatred has quickly spread across the Atlantic, seen in a November 2025 European Commission survey that revealed that 55 percent of Europeans now view antisemitism as a glaring national problem, with nearly 7 in 10 stating that Middle East conflicts directly skew how Jewish people are perceived in their home countries.[3]

What Do Recent Surveys Reveal about Antisemitic Attitudes
The latest ADL Global 100 data shows that antisemitic attitudes have reached alarming global levels. A January 2025 survey by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) found that nearly half of the global adult population—46 percent—exhibits elevated levels of antisemitic attitudes. This means about 2.2 billion people harbor deeply entrenched antisemitic beliefs, more than double compared to ADL’s first worldwide survey in 2014. It’s the highest level on record since ADL started tracking these trends globally. Additionally, the survey found that younger respondents worldwide show a greater prevalence of antisemitic attitudes: 40 percent of respondents under age 35 affirm that “Jews are responsible for most of the world’s wars,” while it is 29 percent for those over the age of 50.[4]
Why Holocaust Denial Makes Antisemitism More Dangerous
Just as alarming is the widespread erasure of history. The 2025 survey also found that 20 percent of the global respondents had never heard of the Holocaust, and less than half (48 percent) recognize the Holocaust’s historical accuracy. Of those who had heard of it, one-third thought it was either a myth or greatly exaggerated. Geographically, the denial is troubling: only 16 percent of the respondents in the Middle East and North Africa and 23 percent in Sub-Saharan Africa recognize the historical accuracy of the Holocaust.[5]
Why Antisemitism Threatens More Than Jewish Communities
Antisemitism is not just a Jewish problem and, if left unchecked, is a threat to society at large. It is often described as an early-warning system—a canary in the mineshaft—alerting us to hateful movements that can threaten all of us. When Hitler unleashed antisemitism and built the Nazi movement on hatred of Jews, he plunged the world headlong on a path of destruction. Not only were 6 million Jews exterminated, but some 50 million people died in World War II.
How Should Christians Respond to Rising Antisemitism
Christians have a moral obligation to withstand hatred and violence directed toward any group, including Jews. But our responsibility goes beyond that. Knowing the history of centuries of church-sanctioned antisemitism that paved the way for the Holocaust, we particularly need to stand with the Jewish people in their modern battle against this evil.
The Evangelical Christian demographic in America has the political and moral weight to push back against this evil invasion of our society. We can no longer remain passive or silent; we must learn how to come against its influence vocally, politically, and prayerfully. The canary in the mineshaft is sounding its call of alarm, and it’s time for the church to act.
Frequently Asked Questions about Christians and Rising Antisemitism
- Why should Christians care about antisemitism?
Christians should care about antisemitism because hatred toward Jewish people is morally evil, historically dangerous, and spiritually connected to the roots of the Christian faith. - How did October 7 affect global antisemitism?
The October 7 Hamas attack intensified global antisemitism by fueling anti-Israel hostility, online hate, campus unrest, and renewed threats against Jewish communities around the world. - Is anti-Israel sentiment always antisemitism?
No. Criticism of any government can be legitimate, but anti-Israel rhetoric becomes antisemitic when it denies Jewish people dignity, safety, self-determination, or uses classic anti-Jewish stereotypes. - How can Christians respond to antisemitism?
Christians can respond by speaking truth, rejecting anti-Jewish theology, praying for Jewish communities, teaching accurate history, opposing hatred publicly, and standing against violence wherever it appears.
For Further Reading
- Dangerous Trends in Jewish-Christian Relations
- What the Hamas Attacks Reveal about Antisemitism in America
- Why the Church Must Fight Anti-Semitism in All of Its Forms
- Holocaust Remembrance Day and the Fight against Antisemitism
- The Biblical Foundation for Christian Support for Israel and the Jewish People
[1] Anti-Defamation League, “Antisemitic Attitudes in America: Topline Findings,” 12 January 2023.
[2] World Israel News, “Whopping Majority of Americans Believe in Antisemitic Tropes, New Poll Finds,” January 2023.
[3] https://combatantisemitism.org/cam-news/eu-survey-antisemitism-rising-and-holocaust-awareness-lagging-in-europe/
[4] Anti-Defamation League, “46% of Adults Worldwide Hold Significant Antisemitic Beliefs, ADL Poll Finds,” 20 February 2025.
[5] Anti-Defamation League, “46% of Adults,” 20 February 2025.
Photo Credit: ©Unsplash/Levi Meir Clancy











