F
followingtheway
Guest
I’ve seen a couple videos about conflict between the two lately. Both sides have convincing arguments. Who do you support?
And hundreds of thousands of Israeli Arab / Palestinian Christians.Israel and the Jews were there long before Islam. There’s what, 10 million Jews surrounded by 1 Billion moslems?
My daily Rosary was made in Bethlehem by the Catholic family of a man who was studying in the US and selling his family’s woodwork. He states that conditions are bad for Christians in Palestine, but he and his family have lived within view of the fields where the angel appeared to the shepherds at Christ’s birth - probably since that time. So far, they can still worship, which is a very good thing. Contact with him has caused my views to moderate toward Palestine, yet it cannot be just another radical Islamic puppet state.And hundreds of thousands of Israeli Arab / Palestinian Christians.
"The Palestinian people does not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity. In reality today there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese. Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence of a distinct Palestinian people to oppose Zionism.
Source: enotes.com/topic/Zuheir_Mohsen#cite_note-1“For tactical reasons, Jordan, which is a sovereign state with defined borders, cannot raise claims to Haifa and Jaffa, while as a Palestinian, I can undoubtedly demand Haifa, Jaffa, Beer-Sheva and Jerusalem. However, the moment we reclaim our right to all of Palestine, we will not wait even a minute to unite Palestine and Jordan.”
There are just a few more than 200,000 Arab Christians in the whole of Palestine. Of those, about 140,000 live in Israel. About 60,000 live in the West Bank. Jews comprise about 500,000 (1/3) of the population of the West Bank. Most of the rest are Muslim Arabs. Gaza has been made essentially “judenrein”, because it is ruled by a terrorist organization whose charter swears death to all Jews.And hundreds of thousands of Israeli Arab / Palestinian Christians.
Some Palestinians in Jordan are in camps. Most are just Jordanians. Lots of them in business and in the government.I am pretty much on the side of the Israelis, except they have done some things with which I disagree.
But I have to admit that I also feel that those who are called Palestinians have been abused–by the other Arabs in the ME. They are just pawns who are brainwashed by their leaders. The history of that area just shows a callousness and hunger for power among the leaders that is just awful. The “Palestinians” in Israel are in much better shape than those in Jordan, who are confined to camps and are restricted in their work. The Israels have assimilated about as many Jews from Moslem nations as there were Palestinians, but the Arab nations keep the “Palestians” confined.
Therefore it would be wrong to characterise this as a Jew vs. Muslim apocalyptic war, as suggested earlier by another poster.There are just a few more than 200,000 Arab Christians in the whole of Palestine. Of those, about 140,000 live in Israel. About 60,000 live in the West Bank. Jews comprise about 500,000 (1/3) of the population of the West Bank. Most of the rest are Muslim Arabs.
Ghaza is “judenrein” (and I hate to use racially-charged, controversial language) because Israel withdrew its settlements in 2005.Gaza has been made essentially “judenrein”, because it is ruled by a terrorist organization whose charter swears death to all Jews.
One of the most difficult contentions of the conflict is overlapping borders, identity, and demographic shifts. The ideas in the debate don’t coincide with the fixed geographical boundaries on the ground. It’s somewhat shaky grounds for a solution, IMO. Therefore, if you’re implying that Jordan should become Palestine, I disagree.Israeli Jews constitute the majority in Palestine outside of Jordan. Though people usually don’t think of Jordan as part of Palestine, it is, properly speaking. The overwhelming majority of Arab Palestinians live in Jordan, and the majority of Jordanians are Palestinians.
Have you missed the last few decades?“Palestinian” is a tribal designation, not a national one. It has never been a national designation.
Er, not really.Saying “Palestinian” is like saying 'Bedouin", another tribal designation.
Um, what? You are engaging in replacement theology and it is utterly false, from the Devil, and gives rise to all manner of un-Christ-like treatment of the Jewish people at large.P.S.
Brian, You appear to be making a bit much of the modern secular state of Israel. One can’t turn a dandelion into a rose by renaming it. Israel in theological terms hasn’t been a nation state since AD70-something, and that’s no coincidence. Christ came to expand the covenant so that Israel is now the Church, the people of God baptised into Grace worldwide. The covenant is no longer limited to one particular chosen people.
Um, what? The Jews generally DID accept Jesus as the promised Messiah. Historical figures well before Christ and well after him show a drastic drop (like 90%) in the overall Jewish population that can only rationally explained by concluding that the bulk of the Jewish people accepted Jesus as Messiah in the early centuries of the Church and became homogenized in with the rest of us as members of the Church as the importance of particularly Jewish identity faded over time inside the Church. So I don’t comprehend what you mean by “the Jews” eventually declaring “Blessed is He…” That happened centuries ago.The “Church” has always been Israel in that the Gentiles were always intended as included in the plan of Salvation and our eventual grafting in to Israel. Ignoring that the Gentiles, being wild branches, are now grafted into spiritual Israel is to ignore that truth. If you take away this truth, you take away all promises, including the reality of the Jews eventually declaring, “Blessed is He Who comes in the Name of the Lord”. For they shall regain a place which is re-opened due to boasting and forgetting what Israel is, God’s chosen.
You state historical figures show a drop in Jewish identity, but you fail to factor the diaspora following the destruction of the Temple in A.D 70, as well as the Hellenization of the Jews. Even worse, you don’t link to these figures so they can be examined in context.Um, what? The Jews generally DID accept Jesus as the promised Messiah. Historical figures well before Christ and well after him show a drastic drop (like 90%) in the overall Jewish population that can only rationally explained by concluding that the bulk of the Jewish people accepted Jesus as Messiah in the early centuries of the Church and became homogenized in with the rest of us as members of the Church as the importance of particularly Jewish identity faded over time inside the Church. So I don’t comprehend what you mean by “the Jews” eventually declaring “Blessed is He…” That happened centuries ago.
I’m not familiar with the term “replacement theology” can you elaborate? This might be a thread tangent…
Now, the Gentiles had no place in the old covenant, unless they gave up their gentile understanding of God and worship of God. They had to become Jews. But, there is no rupture in this, as now the people who were chosen for the old covenant must choose if they will abide by the new covenant, which is totally open to Gentiles as well, without being “Jewish”. So, the covenants are ultimately in the plan of God, in which Israel has always had a place both physically and in a spiritual manner- a manner which can take on metaphorical terms and application while still being under a very real physical set of conditions. The Jews subject themselves to the Old Law, and thus, find no benefit in the new Law, except in the manner in which the Gentiles previously drew benefit from the Old Law- abstractly.St. Augustine writes: “Instead of the grace of the law which has passed away, we have received the grace of the gospel which is abiding; and instead of the shadows and types of the old dispensation, the truth has come by Jesus Christ. Jeremiah also prophesied thus in God’s name: ‘Behold, the days come, says the Lord, that I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah; not according to the covenant which I made with their fathers, in the day that I took them by the hand, to bring them out of the land of Egypt.’ [Jer 31:31–32] Observe what the prophet says, not to Gentiles, who had not been partakers in any former covenant, but to the Jewish nation. He who has given them the law by Moses, promises in place of it the new covenant of the gospel, that they might no longer live in the oldness of the letter, but in the newness of the spirit.” (Letters, 75, 4)