The chairman of the Palm Beach County Democratic Party resigned after saying that pro-Israel Christians want to see Jews "slaughtered and converted."
Mark Alan Siegel resigned on Friday, a day after he apologized for the remarks he had made two days earlier during an interview on the sidelines of the Democratic National Convention.
“My comments merely served as a distraction to the good work of Democrats in Palm Beach," Siegel said in a statement released Friday by the state party, according to the Palm Beach Post. "Again, I express my deepest apologies to anyone I may have offended.”
Siegel, an attorney, had apologized the day after making the comments but reportedly refused to resign, instead offering to take an extended leave of absence.
Siegel had told the conservative Patriot Update website that as a Jew, he was "not a fan of any religion other than Judaism." Asked if he is a fan of Christianity, Siegel responded, according to the Palm Beach Post, "No, I'm not. The Christians just want us to be there so we can be slaughtered and converted and bring on the second coming of Jesus Christ."
He continued, “They’re not our friends. They want Israel to pursue policies which are antithetical with its security and existence. The worst possible allies for the Jewish state are the fundamentalist Christians, who want Jews to die and convert so they can bring on the second coming of their Lord. It is a false friendship. They are seeking their own ends and not ours."
Daily Luther Sermon Quote - Easter Sunday 2 - "To this I reply: I have
often said before that feeling and faith are two different things. It is
the nature of faith not to feel, to lay aside reason and close the eyes, to
submit absolutely to the Word, and follow it in life and death. Feeling
however does not extend beyond that which may be apprehended by reason and
the senses, which may be heard, seen, felt and known by the outward senses.
For this cause feeling is opposed to faith and faith is opposed to feeling.
Therefore the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews writes of faith: “Now
faith is assurance of things hoped for, a conviction of things not seen.”
For if we would see Christ visibly in heaven, like the visible sun, we
would not need to believe it. But since Christ died for our sins and was
raised for our justification, we cannot see it nor feel it, neither can we
comprehend it with our reason. Therefore we must disregard our feeling and
accept only the Word, write it into our heart and cling to it, even though
it seems as if my sins were not taken from me, and even though I still feel
them within me."
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Luther's Sermons - Mark 16:1-8.
Easter Sunday. Second Sermon
10. Here we also refer to the passage in Hosea 13:14, which Paul quotes in
reference to ...
49 minutes ago
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