'Til Kingdom Come (film)

The film explores the alliance between Christian Zionists in the United States and Jewish Israeli settlers in the West Bank.

[1] It documents large donations made to the IFCJ by the Binghams' church despite the poverty of many of their congregants,[2] using this phenomenon as a case study for Christian Zionism, the common belief in Evangelicalism that the gathering of Jews in Israel will bring about the Rapture[1] or the Second Coming for Christians while sending Jews to Hell.

[7] The documentary was scheduled to make its United States broadcast debut[6] on PBS's prime-time Independent Lens platform in March 2021, but it did not air.

[1] Also in The New York Times, an article noted that the film brought about "a wave of guilt and soul-searching" in Israel but predicted that it would also "teach Christian and Jewish audiences in the United States a great deal about subjects they may have thought they already understood – including how American politics really work".

[5] Jonathan Feldstein, who assisted Zinshtein with background information and contacts for 'Til Kingdom Come, wrote a column for Jewish News Syndicate in which he criticized the film.

[11] IFCJ director Yael Eckstein stated that she believed the film reflected the political positions of its creators.