Prepare for war over the Balfour Declaration!

As the centenary of the pivotal “Balfour Declaration” looms in 2017, a new group wants Britain to apologise for making it.

British Mandate map

The British Mandate for Palestine, 1920

November 2017 marks 100 years since the famous “Balfour Declaration” was made in a letter to the British Jewish community, including the famous words, “His Majesty’s government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object…” The letter started a chain of events that led, by no means smoothly, to the eventual formation of the modern state of Israel. With the advent in recent years of campaigns such as BDS (Boycotts, Divestment and Sanctions), an essentially anti-Israel movement, Sabeel (Palestinian “Liberation Theology”) and a plethora of other anti-Israel organisations and groups, attempts to attribute the blame for today’s conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Arabs have delved back into history long before 1948. Read more of this post

Israel and Palestinian Christians

The somewhat plain exterior of the church of the Nativity Bethlehem, shared between several traditional Christian denominations

A few weeks ago, a section of the Palestinian church sponsored a controversial conference, “Christ at the Checkpoint” (see our post here). Last week, CBS News aired one of their “60 Minutes” segments on “Christians in the Holy Land“. Both these public events highlight some important issues in the relationship between Palestinian Christians, the Muslims they live among and the State of Israel.

The traditional denominations in the Palestinian Church (as represented by the ecumenical organisation Sabeel) have been quite successful in raising support in the Western church by casting themselves as victims of Israel’s “illegal occupation” of the West Bank. Just to confuse things, the evangelicals in Britain and Europe who support Sabeel’s critical stance on Israel are (literally and figuratively) an ocean away from the generally pro-Israel stance of American evangelicals.

Palestinian Christians do suffer, of that there is no denial. But is their suffering primarily down to nasty old Israel’s occupation or to the more widespread Muslim persecution of Christians that goes on across the whole Middle East? Sabeel and its supporters go to great lengths to assure the West that there is no persecution of Christians by Muslims in the West Bank. They are all brothers and sisters suffering together under Israel’s “apartheid” and “genocidal” policies. Hanan Ashrawi is seen as an example of how Christians can reach high places in the PLO and PA (although this is more likely because her father was a founder of the PLO)!

Unfortunately, the cries to the West by Palestinian Christian leaders about their suffering because of Israel are mitigated by some equally unfortunate realities on the ground. These largely concern the way in which both international critics of Israel and the Palestinians themselves have blurred the distinction between Palestinians living in Israel as citizens (Israeli Arabs) and those living in the West Bank territories, who are not Israeli citizens. We need to comprehend three major issue here; the difference between Christians in Israel and Christians in the West Bank, the actual extent of Muslim persecution of Christians in the PA areas and the real reason Palestinian Christians can push a perception of persecution by Israel.

For the first issue, take an example from the 60 Minutes programme mentioned above. Read more of this post

What’s Jesus Doing at a Checkpoint?

What an emotive picture; Jesus held up at an Israeli checkpoint! For a conference that has a “…desire that Jesus be central to bringing peace and reconciliation to the Holy Land” even the website banner is an emotive expression of the bias of the event (see below).

The conference, the second of the same title, is being held this week in Bethlehem Bible College in Bethlehem. One might welcome the idea of a Christian conference to promote reconciliation if the list of speakers and topics did not carry a message of its own. The message is that of Palestinian Liberation Theology, an unbalanced doctrine based on the victim-hood of Palestinian Christians, eternally at the mercy of a cold and harsh occupier (no, not the Muslim Palestinian Authority but Israel). Read more of this post

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