No, Israel has not approved any law to remove Christians from the Holy Land. Claims of such legislation are false and often stem from misinformation about a 2023 proposed bill that sought to criminalize religious proselytizing, not remove Christians.
Proposed Anti-Proselytizing Bill (2023): In early 2023, two ultra-Orthodox lawmakers introduced a procedural bill that would have imposed prison sentences for soliciting religious conversion. However, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu halted the bill, stating explicitly on social media, "We will not advance any law against the Christian community." The bill was never advanced to become law.
Current Situation and Allegations: While no removal law exists, some organizations, such as the Higher Presidential Committee for Church Affairs in Palestine, allege that Israeli policies contribute to a demographic decline of Christians through displacement and conflict, particularly citing recent violence in Gaza. Conversely, other reports highlight concerns from Christian leaders regarding potential restrictions on evangelization, though these have not been enacted into statute.
Well said, however, statutes are not needed when hardline doctrine has been the rule of law.
The non secular adhere to old doctrine....if you're an infidel you need to die, or, if you're a gentile you need to die.
OK, I think we can add Lozzy B to that ever-growing list of garbage selling inflooencers and inflooencer wanna be's. Man, that list is getting long, long long. Clickbait, thy name is this.
Considering the entire Arab nations were created artificially by the same people who created Israel, if they want to go back to the areas they had already won in 1967, why would anyone care?
That said, Trump has proven that Greater Israel is dead. Whats important is making sure there are no artifical conflicts going forward in middle east. And this is extremely crucial for MAGA success and for ushering in the American System of economics.
What’s kinda hilarious about this guy (Moshe), I wager a lot of people, if they’d just take off their blinders and look at the theological disagreements, would find they probably have a lot in common with him:
Gafni was strongly opposed to the Supreme Court ruling that the state must recognize gay marriages carried out abroad, stating: "We don't have a Jewish state here. We have Sodom and Gomorrah here."[3] However, he was one of the few ultra-Orthodox public figures to condemn the violence carried out by members of the community over plans for the 2006 Jerusalem gay pride parade.[4]
In February 2016, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu criticized Gafni and other political leaders for making disparaging remarks about Reform and Conservative Judaism. Gafni, following a decision to expand the egalitarian section of the Western Wall, declared he would refuse to recognize the decision, and that Reform Jews were "a group of clowns who stab the Holy Torah".
100% on his Reform comments. They make the LGBT Methodists look practically monastic on a lot of issues. There’s a reason it’s the branch the Rothschilds attended… It should also be perfectly obvious, politically, why they had to scold him.
Let’s just say that the path to peace and reconciliation is gonna be bumpy, and a lot of people are going to truly have to learn humility…. Shoot, I’m probably still one of them.
I imagine this is exactly why we need so many of us…. when the numbers are fewer, it’s just so much easier to lie about something, or to misunderstand context of it, or a poor reaction to it, than it is to uncover the truth of it, especially when they have entire lie distribution networks to help things along...
Israeli lawmakers, Moshe Gafni and Yaakov Asher, who are the authors of the proposed legislation, are ultra-Orthodox members from the United Torah Judaism Party. They submitted the bill in January 2023 as the Israeli judicial reform continues.
According to Premier News, a Christian news platform, the Senior spokesman and Vice President of the International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem, David Parsons, said it was not the first time Gafni had proposed such a ban.
“He’s made a habit every year, every time he gets re-elected in the Knesset to introduce a bill like this. And it never goes anywhere,” Parsons was quoted as saying, adding that “although the bill is concerning, it’s unlikely to go anywhere.”
Sounds like the similar tactics to what a lot of legislative agitators here do.
They are blowing up Churches in Gaza, Lebanon, and the West Bank. Settlers are attacking Christians yet you think that they aren't trying to remove Christians from the Holy Land?
BS as always. Just a couple seconds with Grok gives you the full picture. Highly encourage doing this before posting.
The post's core claim ("Israel has approved a new Law to REMOVE all CHRISTIANS from the HOLY LAND") is not supported by evidence and appears to be a significant exaggeration or misrepresentation.
What the post actually showsThe X post (from July 5, 2026) includes a video and text highlighting tensions, attacks on Christians (spitting, slurs, harassment by extremist settlers), and a quote from Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa (Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem) about daily requests for help due to violations/violence in the West Bank, with uncertainty about where to turn.
It links to a Mondoweiss article (a pro-Palestinian outlet often critical of Israel) from early July 2026, which details Israeli authorities seizing Greek Orthodox Patriarchate land in Jerusalem's Silwan/Wadi Rababah area using expired or administrative "gardening/landscaping orders" under the pretext of creating green spaces. This involved bulldozing trees/crops, expelling a caretaker, and fencing the area.
Basis for elements of the claimLand seizures and pressures: The Mondoweiss piece and similar reports describe Israeli municipal actions against church-owned Palestinian land in Jerusalem, part of broader efforts to control/repurpose areas in Silwan. Rights groups like Emek Shaveh and Peace Now have documented "gardening orders" used on dozens of plots. There are also documented incidents of vandalism, harassment by ultra-Orthodox extremists, and restrictions (e.g., temporary blocks on access to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre during Palm Sunday 2026 amid security concerns).
Cardinal Pizzaballa's concerns: He and other church leaders have repeatedly voiced worries about declining Christian presence, settler violence, property pressures, and residency issues for Palestinian Christians. US State Department religious freedom reports and church statements note harassment/spitting incidents and fears of "erasing" the Christian character of Jerusalem. Christian populations in the Holy Land have declined over decades due to multiple factors (conflict, emigration, economics, and reported discrimination).
Context of tensions: These issues are long-standing, involving radical Jewish settler groups, property disputes in a contested city, and security measures. Similar complaints predate recent events.
Key problems with the "new law to remove all Christians" framingNo credible evidence of any Israeli law or Knesset approval explicitly aimed at expelling or removing Christians as a group. Searches for such a law turn up nothing matching this description.
Related incidents (e.g., land actions, temporary access restrictions, or unrelated proposals like past anti-missionary bills) are being generalized into a sweeping "removal" policy.
Mondoweiss frames specific land disputes and incidents as part of a pattern of "erasing" Christian (and Palestinian) presence, but this is advocacy journalism, not a neutral report of a blanket expulsion law.
Christian leaders criticize specific actions but do not generally describe a nationwide "approved law" for mass removal. Broader emigration of Christians from the region has many drivers, including regional instability.
Bottom line: There are real, documented issues with harassment of Christians, property disputes, and settler extremism in Jerusalem/West Bank that warrant concern and criticism. However, the post's headline claim of a "new Law to REMOVE all CHRISTIANS" lacks a solid basis—it's hype built on legitimate but narrower grievances about specific incidents and land policies. Always cross-check outlets like Mondoweiss against primary sources or less partisan reports for full context.
BS as always. Just a couple seconds with Grok gives you the full picture. Highly encourage doing this before posting.
The post's core claim ("Israel has approved a new Law to REMOVE all CHRISTIANS from the HOLY LAND") is not supported by evidence and appears to be a significant exaggeration or misrepresentation.
What the post actually showsThe X post (from July 5, 2026) includes a video and text highlighting tensions, attacks on Christians (spitting, slurs, harassment by extremist settlers), and a quote from Cardinal
Pierbattista Pizzaballa (Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem) about daily requests for help due to violations/violence in the West Bank, with uncertainty about where to turn.
It links to a Mondoweiss article (a pro-Palestinian outlet often critical of Israel) from early July 2026, which details Israeli authorities seizing Greek Orthodox Patriarchate land in Jerusalem's Silwan/Wadi Rababah
area using expired or administrative "gardening/landscaping orders" under the pretext of creating green spaces. This involved bulldozing trees/crops, expelling a caretaker, and fencing the area.
Basis for elements of the claimLand seizures and pressures: The Mondoweiss piece and similar reports describe Israeli municipal actions against church-owned Palestinian land in Jerusalem, part of
broader efforts to control/repurpose areas in Silwan. Rights groups like Emek Shaveh and Peace Now have documented "gardening orders" used on dozens of plots. There are also documented incidents
of vandalism, harassment by ultra-Orthodox extremists, and restrictions (e.g., temporary blocks on access to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre during Palm Sunday 2026 amid security concerns).
Cardinal Pizzaballa's concerns: He and other church leaders have repeatedly voiced worries about declining Christian presence, settler violence, property pressures, and residency issues for Palestinian Christians.
US State Department religious freedom reports and church statements note harassment/spitting incidents and fears of "erasing" the Christian character of Jerusalem. Christian populations in the
Holy Land have declined over decades due to multiple factors (conflict, emigration, economics, and reported discrimination).
Context of tensions: These issues are long-standing, involving radical Jewish settler groups, property disputes in a contested city, and security measures. Similar complaints predate recent events.
Key problems with the "new law to remove all Christians" framingNo credible evidence of any Israeli law or Knesset approval explicitly aimed at expelling or removing Christians as a group. Searches
for such a law turn up nothing matching this description.
Related incidents (e.g., land actions, temporary access restrictions, or unrelated proposals like past anti-missionary bills) are being generalized into a sweeping "removal" policy.
Mondoweiss frames specific land disputes and incidents as part of a pattern of "erasing" Christian (and Palestinian) presence, but this is advocacy journalism, not a neutral report of a blanket expulsion law.
Christian leaders criticize specific actions but do not generally describe a nationwide "approved law" for mass removal. Broader emigration of Christians from the region has many drivers, including regional instability.
Bottom line: There are real, documented issues with harassment of Christians, property disputes, and settler extremism in Jerusalem/West Bank that warrant concern and criticism.
However, the post's headline claim of a "new Law to REMOVE all CHRISTIANS" lacks a solid basis—it's hype built on legitimate but narrower grievances about specific incidents and land policies.
Always cross-check outlets like Mondoweiss against primary sources or less partisan reports for full context.
I personally believe God would not want people arguing and fighting over land because they believe it is "Holy". I imagine (having a rather Catholic viewpoint) that all things and places created by God are holy. With that thought in mind, I wouldn't be unduly upset if that particular area becomes inaccessible.
There is too much conflict over that area dating back hundreds of years. Wars and death to lay claim to a land that both sides consider Holy. How is this pleasing to the Almighty? I would let this go, live in peace, and take joy in all the beauty of the rest of the world that God has also given us. Holiness is wherever God is and He is everywhere.
Jews secretly (and openly recently) hate Christians and is manufacturing conflicts at the World stage to have Christians and Muslims destroy each other..
No, Israel has not approved any law to remove Christians from the Holy Land. Claims of such legislation are false and often stem from misinformation about a 2023 proposed bill that sought to criminalize religious proselytizing, not remove Christians.
Proposed Anti-Proselytizing Bill (2023): In early 2023, two ultra-Orthodox lawmakers introduced a procedural bill that would have imposed prison sentences for soliciting religious conversion. However, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu halted the bill, stating explicitly on social media, "We will not advance any law against the Christian community." The bill was never advanced to become law.
Current Situation and Allegations: While no removal law exists, some organizations, such as the Higher Presidential Committee for Church Affairs in Palestine, allege that Israeli policies contribute to a demographic decline of Christians through displacement and conflict, particularly citing recent violence in Gaza. Conversely, other reports highlight concerns from Christian leaders regarding potential restrictions on evangelization, though these have not been enacted into statute.
They only bombed the only Catholic Church in Gaza killing the priest, that should tell you something.
Well said, however, statutes are not needed when hardline doctrine has been the rule of law. The non secular adhere to old doctrine....if you're an infidel you need to die, or, if you're a gentile you need to die.
this reeks of a GPT copy paste.
And we should have a new law that removes all aid from Israel
if they want to remove us from their land then we should remove them from our's
I'll drink to that 🍺🍺
Don’t tempt me with a good time
There is no more aid for Israel, since the 10 years aid from Obama days ended this year.
"we've signed a new law banning israel. The bombing commences in 5 minutes."
Fake and ghey...
OK, I think we can add Lozzy B to that ever-growing list of garbage selling inflooencers and inflooencer wanna be's. Man, that list is getting long, long long. Clickbait, thy name is this.
Israel would not be stupid enough to eliminate religious tourism. Fake news.
They will let Christians visit but don't want them in Greater Israel.
Considering the entire Arab nations were created artificially by the same people who created Israel, if they want to go back to the areas they had already won in 1967, why would anyone care?
That said, Trump has proven that Greater Israel is dead. Whats important is making sure there are no artifical conflicts going forward in middle east. And this is extremely crucial for MAGA success and for ushering in the American System of economics.
What’s kinda hilarious about this guy (Moshe), I wager a lot of people, if they’d just take off their blinders and look at the theological disagreements, would find they probably have a lot in common with him:
100% on his Reform comments. They make the LGBT Methodists look practically monastic on a lot of issues. There’s a reason it’s the branch the Rothschilds attended… It should also be perfectly obvious, politically, why they had to scold him.
“So what then are his issues with Christianity?”
https://files.catbox.moe/s14tuv.jpeg
Let’s just say that the path to peace and reconciliation is gonna be bumpy, and a lot of people are going to truly have to learn humility…. Shoot, I’m probably still one of them.
Thinking they would stupid to say that too.
This smells like BS to me! Research and check this thoroughly Anons please.
There are Christian Jews there who would most definitely be affected and have not raised alarm bells on any such law that I’m aware of.
…Of course that should never stop us from giving a reactionary and vengeful hot take. It’s what Jesus would want us to do.
https://greatawakening.win/p/1ATBlwJ6uZ/x/c/4ed42vmaZE3
Thanks to u/aslan_is_0n_the_m0ve . “Israel for last” is exhausting.
I unstickied it though, since the facts/info on this is paper thin at this time.
Will keep an eye on it.
I imagine this is exactly why we need so many of us…. when the numbers are fewer, it’s just so much easier to lie about something, or to misunderstand context of it, or a poor reaction to it, than it is to uncover the truth of it, especially when they have entire lie distribution networks to help things along...
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=israel+approved+new+law+to+remove+christians+from+holy+land
Some more details:
Sounds like the similar tactics to what a lot of legislative agitators here do.
They are blowing up Churches in Gaza, Lebanon, and the West Bank. Settlers are attacking Christians yet you think that they aren't trying to remove Christians from the Holy Land?
BS as always. Just a couple seconds with Grok gives you the full picture. Highly encourage doing this before posting.
Just to make this comment easier to read:
BS as always. Just a couple seconds with Grok gives you the full picture. Highly encourage doing this before posting.
The post's core claim ("Israel has approved a new Law to REMOVE all CHRISTIANS from the HOLY LAND") is not supported by evidence and appears to be a significant exaggeration or misrepresentation.
What the post actually showsThe X post (from July 5, 2026) includes a video and text highlighting tensions, attacks on Christians (spitting, slurs, harassment by extremist settlers), and a quote from Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa (Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem) about daily requests for help due to violations/violence in the West Bank, with uncertainty about where to turn.
It links to a Mondoweiss article (a pro-Palestinian outlet often critical of Israel) from early July 2026, which details Israeli authorities seizing Greek Orthodox Patriarchate land in Jerusalem's Silwan/Wadi Rababah area using expired or administrative "gardening/landscaping orders" under the pretext of creating green spaces. This involved bulldozing trees/crops, expelling a caretaker, and fencing the area.
Basis for elements of the claimLand seizures and pressures: The Mondoweiss piece and similar reports describe Israeli municipal actions against church-owned Palestinian land in Jerusalem, part of broader efforts to control/repurpose areas in Silwan. Rights groups like Emek Shaveh and Peace Now have documented "gardening orders" used on dozens of plots. There are also documented incidents of vandalism, harassment by ultra-Orthodox extremists, and restrictions (e.g., temporary blocks on access to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre during Palm Sunday 2026 amid security concerns).
Cardinal Pizzaballa's concerns: He and other church leaders have repeatedly voiced worries about declining Christian presence, settler violence, property pressures, and residency issues for Palestinian Christians. US State Department religious freedom reports and church statements note harassment/spitting incidents and fears of "erasing" the Christian character of Jerusalem. Christian populations in the Holy Land have declined over decades due to multiple factors (conflict, emigration, economics, and reported discrimination).
Context of tensions: These issues are long-standing, involving radical Jewish settler groups, property disputes in a contested city, and security measures. Similar complaints predate recent events.
Key problems with the "new law to remove all Christians" framingNo credible evidence of any Israeli law or Knesset approval explicitly aimed at expelling or removing Christians as a group. Searches for such a law turn up nothing matching this description.
Related incidents (e.g., land actions, temporary access restrictions, or unrelated proposals like past anti-missionary bills) are being generalized into a sweeping "removal" policy.
Mondoweiss frames specific land disputes and incidents as part of a pattern of "erasing" Christian (and Palestinian) presence, but this is advocacy journalism, not a neutral report of a blanket expulsion law. Christian leaders criticize specific actions but do not generally describe a nationwide "approved law" for mass removal. Broader emigration of Christians from the region has many drivers, including regional instability.
Bottom line: There are real, documented issues with harassment of Christians, property disputes, and settler extremism in Jerusalem/West Bank that warrant concern and criticism. However, the post's headline claim of a "new Law to REMOVE all CHRISTIANS" lacks a solid basis—it's hype built on legitimate but narrower grievances about specific incidents and land policies. Always cross-check outlets like Mondoweiss against primary sources or less partisan reports for full context.
Thanks fren.
Anytime, good comment
We are a Christian based nation we were never a judeo Christian based nation
Certainly not a Khazarian pretender / Christian nation.
I personally believe God would not want people arguing and fighting over land because they believe it is "Holy". I imagine (having a rather Catholic viewpoint) that all things and places created by God are holy. With that thought in mind, I wouldn't be unduly upset if that particular area becomes inaccessible.
There is too much conflict over that area dating back hundreds of years. Wars and death to lay claim to a land that both sides consider Holy. How is this pleasing to the Almighty? I would let this go, live in peace, and take joy in all the beauty of the rest of the world that God has also given us. Holiness is wherever God is and He is everywhere.
Thousands of years.
Jews secretly (and openly recently) hate Christians and is manufacturing conflicts at the World stage to have Christians and Muslims destroy each other..
Charlie got in the way ✡️
Pure rage bait.
I don't believe this. They have to keep a few around to spit on.
I wish.