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  • Holy Land's Christians Form A 'Mosaic' Of Communities; Celebrate A M

    HOLY LAND'S CHRISTIANS FORM A 'MOSAIC' OF COMMUNITIES; CELEBRATE A MASS IN MANGER SQUARE NEXT TO THE CHURCH OF THE NATIVITY IN BETHLEHEM

    CrossMap
    May 29 2014

    By Pat McCarthy and Dan Wooding/ Assist News On May 29, 2014

    A snapshot of the Christian population of the Holy Land was recently
    published in the lead-up to the May 24-26, 2014, visit by Pope Francis
    to Jordan, the West Bank, where he prayed and touched the wall that
    divides Israel from the West Bank, on his way to celebrate a mass
    in Manger Square next to the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem,
    and then onto Israel, his final stop.

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the pope that barriers were
    erected to protect civilians, and at the Israeli leader's request,
    Francis made an unscheduled stop at a memorial for terror victims
    during an already packed itinerary.

    "We don't teach our children to plant bombs," Netanyahu said, standing
    alongside the pope at the memorial. "We teach them peace. But we have
    to build a wall against those who teach the other side."

    For his part, Francis offered symbolic gestures to both sides of the
    Palestinian/Israel divide. The pope entered the West Bank directly from
    Jordan rather than stopping first in Israel as previous popes had done,
    and he referred to the "state of Palestine" in a speech in Bethlehem.

    So, in view of his high profile visit, it is fascinating to
    note that Christians in the Holy land constitute a mosaic of
    communities, according the official website for the papal visit
    (popefrancisholyland2014.lpj.org).

    It says the local, rooted Christians of the Holy Land are for the
    most part Arabic-speaking and live integrated within Palestinian and
    Jordanian Arab society.

    However, an increasing number of Christians of diverse origins also
    live within Jewish Israeli, Hebrew-speaking society.

    An important group of Christians are long-term resident expatriates,
    many of whom serve in Church structures, religious orders, and
    institutions.

    Then there is a large number of Christians who have come to the
    Holy Land as migrants - those seeking work, predominantly from Asia,
    and asylum seekers, predominantly from Africa. And there is a large
    number of Christians among the Syrian and Iraqi refugees in Jordan.

    There are 13 official Churches in the Holy Land that meet together
    regularly in order to coordinate their efforts in favor of the
    Christians of the Holy Land.

    A Greek Orthodox procession in Jerusalem Messianic leader,

    These are the Greek, Armenian, Coptic, Ethiopian and Syrian Orthodox;
    the Latin (Roman), Greek, Maronite, Syrian and Armenian Catholics,
    including the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land; and the Lutherans
    and Anglicans.

    In addition to these, there is also a variety of Evangelical groups.

    The website says Christians number between 2 and 3 per cent of the
    total population of the Holy Land today - a major decrease in their
    proportion of the population since 1948, when they made up more than
    10 per cent.

    In the state of Israel, it says, there are:

    * About 120,000 to 130,000 Christian citizens who are Palestinian
    Arabs.

    * About 30,000 to 40,000 Christian citizens who are integrated into
    the Jewish Israel Hebrew-speaking population (most of them Russian
    speakers).

    * About 150,000 Christian migrants (105,000 migrant workers, mostly
    from the Philippines, India, Sri Lanka, Nigeria, Ghana, Latin America
    and Eastern Europe, and about 45,000 African asylum seekers (mostly
    from Eritrea).

    In the Palestinian Autonomy (and East Jerusalem) there are: * About
    50,000 Christians, almost all of them Palestinian Arabs (about 38,000
    in the West Bank, about 10,000 in Jerusalem and about 2000 in the
    Gaza Strip).

    In the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan there are: * About 250,000 Christian
    citizens who are Jordanian and Palestinian Arabs.

    * Tens of thousands of Christian migrant workers from Asia and Africa.

    * Thousands of Christians among the refugees from Syria and Iraq.

    The website says political and economic conditions have led to
    large-scale emigration of Christians from the Holy Land, so that only
    about 20 per cent of Christian Palestinians remain in their historic
    homeland today.

    It says: "Emigration continues as Christians see that the peace process
    is blocked, the Israeli occupation continues, radical Islamic movements
    prosper and the economic and social situation continues to worsen."

    So there you have it - the Holy Land's Christians form a wonderful
    "mosaic" of communities, and they all follow Jesus Christ, who walked
    this earth in the areas where many of them are from today.

    http://crossmap.christianpost.com/news/holy-lands-christians-form-a-mosaic-of-communities-celebrate-a-mass-in-manger-square-next-to-the-church-of-the-nativity-in-bethlehem-10616




    From: A. Papazian
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