Other false accusations made by the resolution were:
- The resolution falsely accuses Israel of stealing Palestinian water supplies “for Jewish-only settlements”
- Establishing two sets of laws, one for Israelis and one for Palestinians, which give preferential treatment to Israeli Jews and oppressive treatment to Palestinians,
- Denying the right to “freedom of residence to Palestinians.”
- It accused Israel of “dividing the population along racial lines by the creation of separate reserves and ghettos for the Palestinians.”
While acknowledging that there is a disturbing rise in antisemitism, the resolution claimed that its claims were not antisemitic as they addressed “behaviors…without condemning a whole people group.”
The Philos Action League, a Christian community group that works with Jewish allies to combat anti-Semitism and the spread of hatred within the Christian community, is urging Presbyterian Church group members to reject the measure, saying it will contribute to the rising tide of anti-Semitism in the United States.
The resolution also compared Israel to Nazi Germany:
After World War II when the horror of the Nazi Holocaust was revealed, Jews around the world said “never again.” Many Christians around the world were shamed by their silence during the 1930s as Jews in Germany were given special cards identifying their religion, had their businesses shut down, had their land expropriated, and were forced to live in ghettos. Christians too vowed that never again would they be silent if a government passed laws establishing and maintaining the domination by one ethnic group over another ethnic group through systematic separation, oppression, and denial of basic human rights. Silence in the face of evil was wrong then, and it is wrong now.
This map has been widely used as anti-Israel propaganda and has been debunked numerous times. MSNBS aired it in a segment in October 2015 and was forced to issue an apology. The maps give the impression that a state of Palestine had existed in 1946 when in fact the area was under British Mandatory rule until May 14, 1948.
The resolution called to designate May 15 as “Palestinian Nakba Remembrance Day “. Nakba, or ‘catastrophe’, refers to 1948 when Israel successfully defended itself from seven Arab nations attacking from all sides in an attempt to wipe out the Jewish nation. Nakba Day commemorates this as a catastrophe.
The resolution also called for the end of the “siege of Gaza”. Israel pulled out all IDF troops in 2005, and forcibly evacuated 10,000 Jews living there. The Palestinians elected Hamas to govern and they have spent billions of dollars intended for humanitarian aid in attacking Israeli civilian centers. The resolution called on Israel to end all military action in Gaza, which it described as being disproportionate and collective punishment against Palestinians. Despite the Church recognizing that Israel’s strikes on military targets were not in violation of international law, they felt that since the strikes sometimes harmed civilians, they constituted collective punishment.
Ironically, the resolution also called for Israel to adopt a policy of religious freedom in Jerusalem by prohibiting Jews from worshipping at the Temple Mount.
The church also said in the statement that it rejected “the doctrines of Christian Zionism that tend toward idolatry and heresy.”
Grrrr…. Their replacement theology is the heresy. We had an assistant pastor a few years ago who was raised Presbyterian who held similar views. He didn’t take kindly to being labeled antisemitic
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