I just googled did the "did the Rockafellow foundation support the Scofield bible". The answer was NO.
You googled something huh? Thats cute.
Scofield + Zionism + Rockefeller = Theological Mind Bomb
1. Scofield’s Zionist agenda was backed by Oxford and British-Israel financial interests.
He was not a theologian. He was a disgraced lawyer, convicted of forgery, and abandoned his family. Yet somehow his reference Bible magically became the most influential in America?
Why? How?
Because he had help.
Joseph Canfield’s biography “The Incredible Scofield and His Book” (1974) is the smoking gun.
It details Scofield’s ties to Samuel Untermeyer, a prominent Zionist lawyer who also helped draft the Federal Reserve Act — yes, that Untermeyer.
Untermeyer and others helped Scofield get connected to Oxford University Press, which published the Scofield Reference Bible — despite him having no theological training, no scholarly background, and no credibility whatsoever.
(Well... unless you count a criminal record and abandoning his family as “credentials.”)
2. The Rockefeller Foundation directly funded seminaries that pushed Scofield.
In the early 20th century, the Rockefellers bankrolled Union Theological Seminary, and poured money into “modernizing” Christianity — and this included getting Scofield’s Bible into circulation.
See: “Spiritual Warfare: The Hidden Rockefeller Influence on American Christianity”
Also: “The Rockefeller File” by Gary Allen – documents the funding of churches, seminaries, and missionary boards
Public historical archives from the Rockefeller Foundation list religious "modernization" grants
They weren't trying to spread Christ —
They were trying to reshape the American church to support Zionist politics and Western imperial ideology.
Let’s break it down in plain terms:
Scofield’s Bible wasn’t popular because it was accurate —
it was popular because it was mass-distributed, promoted, and funded by powerful people with political motives.
His notes introduced dispensationalism, a theology no one in the early Church ever taught — and linked “Israel” to modern land, war, and politics.
Millions of pastors were trained in Scofield’s framework from 1910 onward — not because it was sound, but because it was available and institutionally backed.
Scofield’s heresy was bankrolled, distributed, and institutionally embedded in the church by Zionists, industrialists, and globalists —not prophets, not saints, not Spirit-led teachers.
And here’s the part that really destroys Scofield’s credibility:
No one — and I mean no one — in the early Church taught what Scofield taught.
The Apostles didn’t teach a secret rapture.
Irenaeus, disciple of Polycarp (who was discipled by John), didn’t teach it.
Justin Martyr, Origen, Tertullian, Clement, Athanasius, Augustine — none of them.
Not a single Church Father interpreted “Israel” as a future geopolitical state.
Not one claimed the Church would be “raptured” out before tribulation.
Not one used Daniel’s 70 weeks to invent a gap for a future 7-year tribulation or rebuilt temple.
How did this modern nightmare happen? Because Scofield’s system didn’t exist until the 1800s — and was spread in America only after being bankrolled and institutionally forced into seminaries.
Even John Nelson Darby, who first invented dispensationalism in the 1830s, was rejected by most of Europe.
But in America? He found hungry industrialists and empire-minded evangelicals who saw his “future Israel” theology as a political tool.
What Scofield did was fuse Darby’s British dispensationalism with American Zionism and slap it into the margins of the Bible.
Then Rockefeller-funded networks made sure every young pastor would be taught to preach it as if it came from God.
This is historical fact — not theory.
So when someone says "this is just what the Bible teaches," they’re really just repeating a 20th-century propaganda program with a leather binding.
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