Yours and similar posts have been responded to by others above who appear to assert that you cannot now rescind the agreement and get back your money in escrow. The reasoning seems to be that since Disney has the right to terminate incidental benefits at any time, and since the resale contracts state that fact, you are therefore stuck with going through with the sale or losing your deposit. It is not as simple as that and you may need to seek legal advice if the broker and seller refuse to end the sale:
I do not know when you signed your purchase agreement, but if 10 days have not passed since then, you can immediately send written notice to the broker that you are voiding the agreement as the law provides for that 10 day right to rescind without even stating a reason for doing so.
Contrary to what some posters are claiming, Disney has not terminated any incidental benefits and thus the supposed disclosure clause in the resale agreement about Disney's right to do so at any time means nothing. All of the incidental benefits continue to be provided by Disney. The only thing Disney has done is to create a special class of purchasers who will not get them. Under current timeshare law, Disney no longer has an absolute right to terminate at any time incidental benefits for all members. Disney is now required to state the specific minimum length of time, which can be any time that is 3 years or less, that incidental benefits will be provided to members who purchase from it, and during that specified time, it cannot terminate any particular incidental benefits for such members unless it replaces them with benefits of like kind and value, or, alternatively, pays the affected members double the value of the incidental benefit being terminated. Thus, that resale contract disclosure about Disney's right to terminate likely cannot be relied upon by the seller or broker to claim rights to your deposit.
Moreover, the action Disney has taken specifically applies to you and it affects your ability to have access to incidental benefits that Disney is otherwise providing. The issue for your right to rescind is not whether Disney can preclude you from using incidental benefits, which it likely can, but instead whether that information about resale purchasers being precluded, which is now provided in an offical document called Membership Extras, which itself is now one of the disclosure documents applicable to the timeshare, is something material to your decision to purchase and complete the resale. More has to be done to look into the issue, but my personal sense is that you have a much stronger case to be able to rescind and get back your deposit than others above have asserted.