Posted on 02/03/2005 10:27:28 PM PST by hope
Israel divestment
This is a WorldNetDaily printer-friendly version of the article which follows.
Friday, February 4, 2005
Presbyterians to justify Posted: February 4, 2005 1:00 a.m. Eastern
© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com In an attempt to justify what some have called an anti-Semitic move, the Presbyterian Church USA will hold a three-day conference to explain to denomination leaders why action was taken to divest from companies doing business with Israel.
As WorldNetDaily reported, the denomination's General Assembly voted 431-62 in July to divest from Israel. The PCUSA is believed to be the largest organization or institution to join the divestment campaign against the Jewish state. It was the first Christian denomination to do so.
The move set the stage for the church to divest itself from companies that receive $1 million dollars or more in profits per year from investments in Israel or have invested $1 million dollars or more in Israel. Apartheid South Africa is the only other nation the denomination has similarly sanctioned.
Scheduled for Feb. 10-12 in Louisville, Ky., home to the denomination's administrative offices, the meeting is meant to let synods and presbyteries "know what we did and why we did it," Marthame Sanders, missionary-in-residence at the PCUSA offices said in a statement.
The meeting is expected to draw 200 participants representing every synod and presbytery in the nation.
The church's statement characterized last summer's move as part of a "process of 'phased selective divestment' in companies supporting the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza and in corporations profiting from either Israeli or Palestinian violence."
Said the denomination: "The action is also directed at engaging corporations or financial institutions who benefit from the ongoing creation and expansion of Israeli settlements on the West Bank."
The statement confirmed that Jewish leaders were especially upset with the General Assembly's action.
"Presbyteries and synods have been getting asked a lot of questions about this," stated Sanders, saying the middle governing bodies needed and wanted information about what the assembly did "to be equipped to have a debate" on the subject.
Included on the meeting's agenda is a discussion of Presbyterian theology, "particularly related to Christian Zionism," the statement said.
Subsequent to the church's July action, a petition drive began to protest the move.
The petition says the church's resolution is "anti-Semitic because NO OTHER nation is being singled for divestment, not even those whose violations of human rights are truly egregious."
"Only the moral blindness of Jew-hatred could lead the church to compare Israel's multi-racial democracy to apartheid South Africa," the petition says. "Only anti-Semitism could lead the church to condemn democratic Israel, while not voting divestment from Saudi Arabia, where women have virtually no rights and non-Muslims are not even permitted to enter the country without special permission, from Sudan, where race-based genocide is occurring even as we speak, from Iran, where Bahai are murdered for their faith, or from the many other countries where human rights are violated as a matter of routine."
During the same time period this month, a PCUSA seminary in Austin, Texas, is hosting an event entitled, "To Loose the Chains of Injustice: American Churches and the Palestinians." The denomination is one of the participating churches in the Feb. 11-12 meeting.
"The focus of this conference is on the work of the churches for a just peace in Israel-Palestine," states a flyer advertising the confab.
A group of Presbyterian elders and ministers are circulating a petition among the PCUSA membership to call the General Assembly back into special session to rescind the Israel Divestment Resolution.
Related stories:
Presbyterian: Muslims easier to deal with than Jews
Are mainline churches anti-Semitic?
Episcopal Church next to shun Israel?
Petition condemns church for 'hatred' of Israel
Presbyterians to divest from Israel
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Let them justify their mission to make friends with Hamas too.
Please don't confuse them with the Bible Presbyterian, Orthodox Presbyterian, Evangelical Presbyterian, Presbyterian Church in America, Associate Reformed Presbyterian, and Free Presbyterian churches.
Thank You
I wouldn't do that
Many will. Thank you for your consideration.
I have no problems with choosing not to invest in Israel.
It isn't like we don't send at least $3 billion a year in foreign aid since 1987...
Rank-and-file Presbyterians didn't vote for this; it was the leftist activists who have embedded themselves in leadership positions.
Leaving aside the question of investing in Israel, they are divesting from UYS companies that do business with Israel and, in particular, help it defend its citizenry from terrorism. For example, an often-mentioned target of the divestiture crusade (even by a PCUSA minister who posted on Free Republic) was Caterpillar, because it sells bulldozers to the IDF, which the IDF uses to close weapon-smuggling tunnels.
They are trying to pressure American companies to abandon Israel's efforts to defend itself against Palestinian arab terror.
UYS = US
If they want to divest, fine. It is a valid critique of Israeli policy, regardless of whether you agree, and it's not like the Presbyterian church is going to bring down the state of Israel. Considering this to be appeasement to Hamas is a complete misuse of the word.
You're speaking of a church that is not only interested in appeasing HAMAS, in the misguided belief that they will somehow be spared their ultimate wrath...
This is a church that actively endorses-albeit, in a roundabout manner-the essential goals embodied by the 1987 founding charter of the "Islamic Moment."
They are part and parcel of the malodorous National Council of Churches, commie-symps who never met a chic Marxist cause celebre that they hesistated to wholeheartedly embrace.
Anyway, this guy in the book, he said something about blessing those who bless Israel, and cursing those who curse Israel. Can you believe it? The bishops had a good laugh over it at the last NAMBLA meeting.
More accurately it's very close to co-operation with the Arab boycott of Israel. Which is illegal.
"Truly they should replace the crosses in their churches with Swastikas."
And ruin a good disguise? That would make it awfully easy to spot those wolves.
May we continue to TEST the spirits, ALL of them, as HE has commanded us to do, to know whether they are of GOD. Only those who love Israel with all their hearts are of God.
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