Posted on 05/24/2016 6:27:11 PM PDT by SJackson
n 2016, the frontline of the war against the legitimacy of the Jewish state isnt Gaza or Israels northern border or even the Golan Heights. It is the global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, which seeks to terminate the Jewish state by delegitimizing it in the world community.
This ugly campaign plays out on our nations college campuses, including most recently at the University of California-Irvine, where campus police had to intervene to save (mostly) Jewish women from activists protesting a film about Israeli soldiers.
BDS-ers, crafting their efforts as pro-peace, have had considerable success with mainline Protestant denominations. But the just-concluded quadrennial General Conference of the United Methodist Church effectively voted to begin divesting from divestment.
By the time the gavel fell to close the conference, delegates had rejected a resolution that would have seen the Church divest from American companies accused of profiting from Israeli control of Judea and Samaria (the West Bank). Even more importantly, by a healthy margin, members asked their church to end its association with the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation (ETO), one of the worst merchants of BDS toxins.
Delegates in effect responded to the rationale offered by the measures sponsors, who called out ETOs one-sided agenda seeking to isolate Israel economically, socially and culturally, and promoting comprehensive divestment against Israel. Methodist voters concluded that blaming only one side, while ignoring the wrongdoing of Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran, does not advance the cause of peace.
Frankly, Jewish activists had expected the worst from the Methodist conference. We were hoping that the least-bad of competing anti-Israel peace resolutions would be adopted.
While it may be premature to see this as a turnaround moment for BDS within mainline Protestant churches, Methodist members concluded that ETOs call for divestment gets Palestinians nowhere but investment does.
Could it be that these delegates realized that BDS is more about spite and punishment than progress? That the BDS pressure on SodaStream to close its plant in Maale Adumim cost dozens of Palestinians a chance at a decent livelihood? That BDS-ers would rather hurl false charges of water-inequity at Israel than accept desalinization installations offered to Palestinians? Maybe. The bottom line is that a majority of delegates agreed that investment can serve as a building block of peace in the Holy Land by increasing economic cooperation between Arabs and Jews.
If and it is a big if churches adopt a more realistic and practical approach to the Palestinian matter, perhaps they will find a stronger collective moral voice in defense of an estimated 190 million endangered Christians on three continents. Perhaps some of their outrage can be shifted to our governments abysmal record on Christian refugees, who number about 10% in Syria. Since emergency provisions began last October, Christians have amounted to only 0.44% of those admitted to the US, according to the State Department Refugee Processing Center. In May, of 499 Syrian refugees approved to enter America, no Christians at all were included.
Will the daily threats to Christian life and limb and the virtual extinction of Christian life in the historic Christian communities of Iraq finally move these churches to refocus their considerable clout to mitigate the suffering of their co-religionists? Will they lobby to help Syrian Christian refugees come to this country in significant numbers?
Delegates to the General Conference reported that a letter strongly condemning BDS penned by Hillary Clinton, a practicing Methodist probably had an impact on the vote, as well. In a letter to Jewish activists, she said: I believe that BDS seeks to punish Israel and dictate how the Israelis and Palestinians should resolve the core issues of their conflict .I know you agree that we need to make countering BDS a priority, and that we need to work together across party lines and with a diverse array of voices to reverse this trend with information and advocacy, and fight back against further attempts to isolate and delegitimize Israel .When antisemitism is on the rise across the world, we need to repudiate forceful efforts to malign and undermine Israel and the Jewish people.
Mrs. Clinton got it right. We have to wonder whether Bernie Sanders would make a similar declaration.
Our community cannot afford to let down our guard in combatting BDS. But if the Methodists could see through the imbalance, distortion and extremism of BDS, perhaps others, including the European funders and backers of BDS, might eventually as well.
For some, however, loathing (and self-loathing) are stronger than reason. For some, BDS are convenient letters to hide their antisemitism. However these battles play out in churches, the many campus BDS groups and Jewish Voice for Peace, buttressed by untouchable tenured academics, will pursue their extreme anti-peace BDS campaigns long after our Christian neighbors see the light.
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How about trying to support God’s chosen people for a change?I don’t think that’s too much to ask.
IT’s a good thing!
and they voted to set up a special council to look at the whole sexuality issue...
maybe it was kicking can down road..but if they are going to split apart its better that its an done the right way an Spirit.
Freegards
LEX
supersessionism theology
The left worships Islam.
They embrace their would be murderers.
I have never met a Methodist that has ever impressed me with their intelligence level.
No offense to any Methodists here on freerepublic, but that is just my life experience talking.
I have to say I’m shocked. I’ve been a Methodist all my life and I rarely agree with the General Conference. There’s a fist time for everything I guess.
I was also pleasantly surprised. I am also a lifelong Methodist.
One of the most brilliant New Testament scholars in the world is Ben Witherington III, who is a Methodist and teaches at Asbury Theological Seminary. I’d say the issue is more the Methodists you meet, and not our intelligence level overall. ;)
I’m hopeful that 2012’s General Conference was the big turnaround for our church, and we evangelicals definitely have momentum on our side after GC 2016, even with the shenanigans with the Council of Bishops’ commission.
Surprised actually, but very happy the UMC voted as they did.
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