The Mainline Protestant Churches and Israel (FrontPageMagazine.com) By Joseph Puder 03/22/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/03/22/the-mainline-protestant-churches-and-israel/
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During the upcoming General Conference of the United Methodist Church
(UMC) scheduled for April 25-May 4, 2012 in Tampa, FL, and the 220th
General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church USA (PCUSA), June 30-July
7, 2012 in Pittsburgh, PA, anti-Israel actions in the form of
petitions and overtures calling for some form of boycott, divestment
or sanctions against the Jewish State and those who do business with
the state are expected to be brought to the floor for a vote.
Influential elements within the mainline Protestant churches in the
U.S. and specifically the UMC and PCUSA, have, within the past few
years, initiated divestment campaigns against the Jewish State, with
some condemning Israel as an “apartheid state.” These churches seek
to emulate the campaigns against the “apartheid” regime of South
Africa. The punitive measures against Israel, they explain, are in
response to Israel’s policies in the West Bank and Gaza. Some go as
far as accusing Israel of racism against the Palestinian Arabs.
These “protectors” of human rights have ignored the endemic efforts
by the Arabs/Palestinians to destroy the Jewish State through war,
terrorism, and their anticipated success at demographic warfare based
on their claims of right of return of Palestinian refugees to
Israel. And, they have ignored the pervasive teaching of hatred of
Jews in Palestinian schools, mosques, and through the Palestinian
media.
Sabeel, the Jerusalem based Ecumenical liberation Theology is an Arab
Palestinian Christian institution, which has become a major source of
the anti-Israel narrative employed by elements of the mainline
Protestant churches. This dhimmified Arab-Christian group habitually
condemns, as human rights violations, Israel’s efforts to defend its
people from Arab-Palestinian terrorist attacks (road blocks and the
construction of the protection fence have eliminated attacks by more
than 95%). Sabeel also encourages anti-Semitism by employing deicide
imagery; depicting the Palestinians as the crucified Jesus and the
Israelis as the crucifers or, in simple terms, as the modern Christ
killers.
Mainline Protestant churches have not sought to divest from Arab
Muslim states such as Egypt and Iraq who routinely engage in
the “ethnic cleansing” of Christians. Nor do they organize boycott
campaigns against Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey for the brutal
persecution of their Kurdish minorities. And, they have not
considered labeling Saudi Arabia and Iran as “apartheid states” for
discriminating against religious and ethnic minorities.
Additionally, in Saudi Arabia religious worship by Christians or Jews
is outlawed and punishable. The righteous indignation of these
Mainline Christians churches finds expression only against Israel.
When Israel is irrationally singled out for boycotts, divestments,
and sanctions for alleged human rights violations against the
Palestinians, the only explanation seems to be a deep rooted bias
against the Jewish state – which, as the collective, is more
acceptable than being anti-Semitic/against individual Jews.
In the recent issue of the Palestine Israel Ecumenical Forum (PIEF) –
a bulletin published by the World Council of Churches (which
represents the U.S. mainline Protestant and Orthodox churches), an
article entitled “It’s Time for Palestine,” was featured along with
an advertisement for “World Week for Peace in Palestine Israel, May
28-June 3, 2012. The article calls for member churches faith based
communities and civil society organizations to join together in 2012
for a week of advocacy and action in support of an end to the illegal
occupation of Palestine.
What is offensive about the term “illegal occupation of Palestine” is
that it ignores historical facts. Israel won the West Bank and Gaza
in the 1967 defensive war in which the forces of Jordan, Egypt and
Syria joined in order to “drive the Jews into the sea.” Prior to
1967, the West Bank and Gaza were illegally occupied by Jordan and
Egypt respectively. The UN Resolution 242 of 1967 called
for “territory for peace.” This meant that Israel, in exchange for
peace, would give up territories – the resolution was specific in its
wording and did not say all the territories. At Khartoum in September
of 1967 the Arab response to this was No Peace, No Recognition, and
No Negotiations with Israel. This then was in keeping with actions
previously taken by the Palestinian-Arabs when, in 1947, they
rejected the UN Partition Plan that would have given them a state in
the West Bank and Gaza. This action was preceded by their rejection
of the terms of the 1937 Peel Commission in which recommendation was
made for a state that would have given the Palestinian Arabs 68% of
Mandatory Palestine.
In the aftermath of war in 1967 Jordan refused to commit to peace,
and the Palestinians re-committed themselves to an armed struggle
that they hoped would eliminate the Jewish State and replace it with
a so called “secular, democratic Palestine.” Today, as then, there
are no examples of a secular democracy in the Arab world – including
the Palestinians in Gaza (under Hamas) and in the West Bank (under
the Palestinian Authority) – all of which are undemocratic and call
for Islamic law (Sharia) to govern in its territory.
In the March 29, 2011 issue of the UMC publication Faith in Action
titled “It’s Time for Palestine” Rev. John Calhoun writes: “The winds
of change are blowing. For millions across the Middle East, the
future will be radically different from the past…Unfortunately, one
state’s undemocratic, militaristic rule over millions of civilians
suffering under its administration looks likely to continue
unchanged. That state is Israel, and those living under its
illegitimate control are the Palestinians of East Jerusalem, the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip.”
One mustn’t be surprised by the outrageous comments of Rev. Calhoun
when using such phrases as “undemocratic and militaristic” with
reference to Israel, as the UMC promotes the writings of Palestinian
Rev. Mitri Raheb, a lead author of the unbalanced and anti-Israel
Kairos Palestine Document of 2009, and former U.S. President Jimmy
Carter, author of the highly inflammatory book Peace Not Apartheid as
the basis for their study materials.
Rev. Calhoun has conveniently overlooked the fact that Gaza is
governed by the Islamist terrorist regime of Hamas, which has
attacked Israeli civilians with thousands of rockets, and which has
vowed never to recognize the Jewish State. He ignores the fact that
it is the obligation of the Israeli government to defend its civilian
population under attack from Gaza’s Hamas terrorists. Moreover,
most Arabs living in Eastern Jerusalem are the envy of the Arabs
elsewhere in the Middle East because of the freedom, democracy,
access to health services, and higher standard of living they have
achieved under Israeli administration.
Mahmoud Abbas, like his predecessor Yasser Arafat, has had ample
opportunities to make a genuine peace with Israel. Prime Minister
Ehud Barak made far reaching concessions to Arafat in July 2000 at
the Camp David Summit. Arafat chose the path of war instead and
launched an Intifada in September 2000. In 2008, Mahmoud Abbas
rejected the most extensive concession made to date, by the former
Israeli PM Ehud Olmert.
This mantra of “occupation” used by the Palestinians and their
supporters in the Mainline Protestant churches is merely propaganda.
In reality, Palestinians have governed themselves since 1994,
following the Oslo Accords. As historical facts bear out, they could
have achieved complete sovereignty in 2000 and 2008, had they cared
more for their independence than the destruction of the Jewish State.
For the Israel Palestine Mission Network (IPMN) of the PCUSA,
however, historical facts and truth do not matter. The IPMN continues
to push the anti-Israel Kairos Palestine document, and seek punitive
measures against Israel, thus exposing their anti-Jewish bias.
(Copyright © 2012 FrontPageMagazine.com 03/22/12)
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