General Assembly Hall of the Church of Scotland, Edinburgh
ED
Noor: You can bet there will be a HUGE outcry over this. The media will either suppress this issue or have a ball frantically trying to discredit these brave Scots. Not only will
there be the usual rending of clothes and incoherent whining from the usual culprits, but the
members of this Christian organization will be under intense personal scrutiny and
pressure to vote in the "politically correct"
fashion ~ and strike the report down. Let us pray that "our dear friends" fail and the
report becomes policy. This could be a great part of the international
awakening we all work and pray for.
May 4, 2013
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The Church of Scotland says Israel has no right to the occupied Palestinian lands.
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In a new report titled “The Inheritance of Abraham? A Report on the
‘Promised Land,’” the church said Israel’s claim to the occupied
territories could be invalidated by its treatment of Palestinian people.
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The report will be voted on by the 700 church members who attend the annual general assembly later this month.
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If the paper is passed by a majority, it may become "the considered view of the Church,” a spokesperson said.
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The report also calls for the church to consider backing “economic
and political measures involving boycotts, disinvestment and sanctions
against Israel focused on illegal settlements.”
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Moreover, it calls on Christians to lobby the UK government to put
pressure on the Tel Aviv regime to halt its illegal settlement
activities in the occupied Palestinian territories.
“Christians should not be supporting any claims by Jews, or any other people, to an exclusive or even privileged divine right to possess particular territory,” the report said.Palestinians refer to the May 15, 1948 occupation of Palestine as the “Nakba Day,” which means the Day of the Catastrophe in Arabic, to mark the expulsion of more than 700,000 Palestinians from their homeland almost 65 years ago.
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Israeli forces have wiped nearly 500 Palestinian villages and towns
off the map, leaving an estimated total of 4.7 million Palestinian
refugees hoping for an eventual return to their homeland more than six
decades later.
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