Something I noticed recently. Johnnie Moore is an 'evangelical', probably dispensationalist, who has been put in charge of the so called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
A few months earlier, he was responsible for this report smearing people who use the phrase 'Christ is King' as anti-semitic.
It's as if he is the go-to 'evangelical' on tap when it comes to advancing the interests of Israel and the more general anti-semitism moral panic.
The so-called jews of today are not the Jews of the Bible.
This is a big thing that usually gets left out of the dispensationalist discussions.
On the religious side, following the three Jewish revolts against Rome - and the massive devastation that resulted from them - Rabbinical tradition became increasingly important and even superseding the Old Testament texts. A couple hundred years later, this was codified in the Talmud.
Additionally, and much more significantly (in my mind), was the Haskalah in the late 1700s and 1800s. One of the big consequences of that was the development of a non-religious Jewish identity. And over the 150-200 years since then, we've seen a very large growth in secular or cultural Judaism. And even among those Jews who are still religious, a huge part of their identity is often tied into the cultural idea of "being Jewish".