Homosexuals wage holy war on Israeli village
Court orders 'faith-based community' to violate beliefs
Published: 10 hours ago
Nestled in the hills outside of Jerusalem is a Messianic communal
village founded nearly 40 years ago by Finnish Christians who believed
in the biblical restoration of Israel to the Jewish people. Today, some
150 Israeli believers and evangelical Christians live and work there
while providing a “living testimony” as Israeli believers in Jesus
Christ. But now the faith-based community of Yad Hashmonah may
be forced to shut its doors after being ordered by an Israeli court to
compensate two lesbians who were not allowed to hold their “gay” wedding
at the banquet hall and biblical gardens. “We do not hate homosexuals
or lesbians. We love them. We simply told the court that it is God’s
word in the Bible that calls homosexuality an abomination,” Ayelet
Ronen, general secretary for the village, told Israel Today. The women,
who were married in England, where same-sex unions are legal, wanted
to renew their vows and hold a reception at the Messianic Israeli
moshav, or settlement. When the receptionist explained “the owners are
believers in the Bible and cannot perform a ceremony of this nature
here,” the women filed a lawsuit.
A judge ruled in favor of the lesbian couple and awarded them $20,000
in “damages.” And now that lower court ruling has been upheld by the
Jerusalem District Court. Judge Moshe Yoad Cohen determined the village
violated a law prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation
and that the village cannot refuse to host a same-sex wedding reception
despite religious objections. During the trial, representatives of the
Moshav quoted from both Old and New Testaments. “As a faith-based
community we need to be able to refuse events that blatantly oppose our
religious beliefs. We explained to the judge that a same-sex celebration
would ruin our business. The majority of our clientele are Christians
who vigorously oppose gay marriage,” said Ronen. The lesbians’ lawyer
also accused the village of “homophobia” after the moshav published an
announcement that “no homosexual or lesbian organization will be allowed
to rent space for functions on our premises.” As Bible believers, the
community also refuses services for abortion activists and yoga
enthusiasts. “We have already received phone calls from many more
homosexual groups and couples saying they want to get married here. To
avoid another legal problem, for now, we simply cannot book anything at
all,” said Ronen. The moshav has now completely shuttered its banquet
facility, resulting in huge financial losses. “We used to host an
average of 35-50 weddings a year over the past 12 years. Israelis from
all over the country, religious and secular, loved to come here. Now
there are none,” added Ronen.
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/06/
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