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Archives for August 2008

This page lists our postings from all of August

For an index to all our reports
from the 218th General Assembly

For an index to all our reports from the
Witherspoon conference on global mission and justice >>

For posts from all of December, 2009
November, 2009
October, 2009
September, 2009

August, 2009
July, 2009
June. 2009
May, 2009

April, 2009
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February, 2009
January, 2009
December, 2008
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October, 2008
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July, 2008
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January, 2008


For links to earlier archive pages, click here.

8/29/08
So ... what's so great about being a pilgrim people?

These latest additions are posted from just outside St. Paul, Minnesota -- where the Republicans are coming in just a couple days.  We have spent the last couple weeks (or is it years?) packing, driving from Georgia to Minnesota, unpacking -- and still we're trying to find things, and once we find them, trying to find places to put them.  So that's why the long silence.  But we are making progress again the chaos, and here are a few things that I want to share right now.

Your achy but happy web-weaver, Doug King

With John McCain’s choice of Gov. Sarah Palin as his running mate, 'creation science' enters the race

In October, 2006, the Anchorage Daily News reported on Republican Sarah Palin’s affirmation that creationism should be taught alongside evolution in the state's public classrooms.   Here's the story >>

Thanks to John Shuck, and to The Clergy Letter Project, for calling attention to this interesting bit of background.

Interfaith Worker Justice urges:

Waste Management workers deserve the right to organize!

Forty years after Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. stood with workers in their historic strike in Memphis, sanitation workers in the solid waste industry are still fighting for decent wages, safe working conditions and respect.

Waste Management workers across the country are seeking to improve their working condition and wages by organizing with the Teamsters union. Workers are facing Waste Management's fierce anti-union tactics, including captive audience meetings, letters and firings.

Sanitation workers at Waste Management deserve the right to organize in an environment free from intimidation and threats of job loss. A huge proportion of sanitation workers are Latino and African American, just as in Dr. King’s day.

As people of faith, we stand in support of these workers and encourage Waste Management to immediately stop these practices. Our religious teachings say that we are to treat others as we wish to be treated, and that laborers deserve their just reward.

Interfaith Worker Justice urges: Please add your name to the list of religious leaders and people of faith who stand with workers at Waste Management by signing the petition. Click here and scroll down a bit.

$1.2 million grant bolsters collaboration among faith-based LGBT organizations to increase the number of welcoming and affirming churches

The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Foundation’s Institute for Welcoming Resources (IWR) and five partner organizations have been awarded a total of $1.2 million from the Evelyn and Walter Haas, Jr. Fund to work jointly to expand the number of churches that are welcoming and affirming of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people and to strengthen their internal capacities. This funding is significant not only because of its dollar amount, but also because it marks a breakthrough in secular foundation support for LGBT faith organizing efforts.

The recipients are the Task Force’s Institute for Welcoming Resources, which works with the welcoming church movement in 30 Christian denominations; Integrity, which works within the Episcopal Church; Lutherans Concerned/North America, which works within the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada; More Light Presbyterians, which works within the Presbyterian Church (USA); Reconciling Ministries Network, which works within the United Methodist Church; and the United Church of Christ Coalition for LGBT Concerns.

The grant, which will be paid out over two years, will support a strategic, collaborative effort to expand pro-LGBT faith-based organizing efforts and allow the groups to fortify their respective infrastructures. Through the welcoming church movement, congregations decide — through a formal vote — to offer an unconditional welcome to people of all sexual orientations and gender identities. To date, more than 3,100 congregations across the Christian spectrum have explicitly welcomed LGBT people to full inclusion in the life and ministry of their congregations.     The full story >>

Washington Report to Presbyterians July-August issue highlights ...

The Hospitality of Housing Policy

Is not this the fast that I choose: to loose the bonds of injustice, to undo the thongs of the yoke, to let the oppressed go free, and to break every yoke? Is it not to share your bread with the hungry, and bring the homeless poor into your house? - Isaiah 58:6-7a

The stories of the Hebrew Bible place a tremendous emphasis on the idea of place – of having a place to call home. It is not such a surprise, really – it is a collection of stories produced by the descendants of people who wandered in the wilderness for forty years. Of course home was important to them. And likewise, the concept of hospitality, of inviting others into their homes, was a foundation of society, because they had once been strangers / sojourners / resident aliens / immigrants / refugees, and they knew what it felt like to be strangers in a strange land.

Likewise, hospitality returns as a central theme in the ministry of Jesus, the length of which is marked by acts of hospitality. His hospitality knows no bounds as he welcomes those at the margins of society. He shares meals and communes with those to whom no one else will even speak. The conduct of his own ministry is dependent upon the hospitality of others. Think of all the events that take place in people’s homes. Both the hospitality of Jesus and the hospitality that Jesus receives are pervasive and enabling throughout the Gospels.

The Rationale for the 218th General Assembly’s (2008) new statement, “From Homelessness to Hope” discusses God’s hospitality:

God makes a home and a place for all at the table, but humans, through sin, have excluded particular groups of people… Due to human sin, hospitality too often becomes a matter of sharing our crumbs rather than offering an abundant loaf… In contrast, true hospitality is equated with justice. Each person is provided not only a chair and a meal, but a bed and a place of shelter, indeed the opportunity to become an ongoing part of the community. True hospitality requires emancipation of slaves and economic redistribution, so all may find a place to be at home.    Click here for the full GA statement >> 

Certainly, the question of hospitality for the stranger is a question for the church, but what about U.S. national policy? The question of U.S. hospitality is the concern of this Washington Report to Presbyterians. Whether the issues concern immigration and family reunification, refugee policy, or the homelessness and affordable housing crisis at home, U.S. policies have much for which to answer when it comes to hospitality.

The July-August issue of Washington Report to Presbyterians provides very helpful surveys of three areas in which Christians are discerning the call to welcome the stranger and the homeless:

bullet Homelessness and the lack of affordable housing
bullet The Plight of Immigrant Families
bullet Iraqi Refugees
 

Also -- plan for this event:

ECUMENICAL ADVOCACY DAYS – "Enough for All Creation”

The program for Ecumenical Advocacy Days (March 13-16, 2009) will focus on the world’s abundance and how it can be allocated to address concerns regarding climate change, immigration and migration, and poverty. Religious advocates and activists will gather in Washington DC for worship, issue briefings, workshops, advocacy skills training, and lobbying with Congress. Information and registration forms will be available soon at www.advocacydays.org.


And -- join the Washington Report e-list!

If you want to receive Washington Report to Presbyterians, just click here.  If you’d like to receive it electronically, send your name, mail address and email address to mary.cooper@pcusa.org. Members who subscribe electronically to Washington Report will also receive Witness in Washington Weekly, an online weekly update of legislation before Congress, with related Presbyterian policy and links to more information.

8/15/08
Synod of Lakes and Prairies PJC dismisses another complaint against the Rev. Paul Capetz

The Permanent Judicial Commission of the Synod of Lakes and Prairies Tuesday, Aug. 12, dismissed a remedial case filed against the Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area that sought to nullify the presbytery’s Jan. 26 action that restored the Rev. Paul Capetz, an openly gay man, to the exercise of ordained ministry.   The full report >>

See our report on the earlier complaint >>

NCC responds to Russian attack on Georgia

The Rev. Dr. Michael Kinnamon, General Secretary of the National Council of Churches USA, has issued a statement calling the recent Russian invasion of Georgia “a disheartening reminder that the 21st century remains a primitive age of fanatical nationalism and military bullying.”

He adds that “Political leaders in Russia and Georgia -- indeed in many other nations including our own -- seek to justify military interventions on the grounds of national interest or public security. In general the churches of Christ reject such puerile political rationalizations.”

The full text of the letter >>

Also —

PC(USA) and RCA send letter to churches in Georgia and Russia

As the conflict in the former Soviet Republic of Georgia continues, the Rev. Gradye Parsons, stated clerk of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), has joined with the Rev. Wesley Granberg-Michaelson, general secretary of the Reformed Church in America (RCA), in sending a letter of concern and solidarity to church partners in Georgia and Russia.

The text of the letter, and a list of church partners to whom it has been sent >>

8/12/08
Social Witness Policy
bulleta summary of GA actions
bulletand a listing of study committees on which you might want to serve

The staff of the Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy, along with the committee's Co-Chairs, has issued a very helpful summary of social witness policy actions by the 218th GA, along with notes on the numerous study committees that will be appointed by the Moderator or by ACSWP.

Help wanted

Presbyterian World Mission seeks candidates for international service

Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) mission leaders are asking the church to help them identify qualified candidates for international mission service.

“The General Assembly Council developed a budget, which in June was approved by the General Assembly, that enables the church to reverse a 50-year trend of decline in the number of mission co-workers serving internationally,” says Hunter Farrell, the church’s director of World Mission. “We are seeking to increase the number from fewer than 200 today to 215 in 2009 and 220 in 2010.” Currently, 18 mission positions are posted on the Mission Service Recruitment office’s Web site [www.pcusa.org/msr].

They are scattered around the world and call for a variety of skills and gifts. “Both the World Mission staff and our international partners agree that all these positions meet critical needs,” Farrell says. “Our partners have been requesting some of these positions for several years.” The church, however, lacks candidates for some positions and that is why World Mission is asking individual Presbyterians to consider their own call and giftedness for mission service and encourage others to do likewise, he adds.

“Many times people hear a call to service after somebody has affirmed their giftedness,” Farrell says. “I would like Presbyterians to think about individuals who worship in the pew behind them on Sunday mornings, who serve on the congregation’s Mission Committee with them, or who work with them on presbytery projects and in other areas of ministry.”

Some of the openings include:
-A Christian educator/evangelist in the Democratic Republic of Congo
-An English teacher in Indonesia
-A health coordinator in Sudan
-A women’s leadership facilitator in Guatemala

For more information about mission service, email the Mission Service Recruitment office [msr@pcusa.org] or call toll-free (888) 728 7228, x2530.

The full story >>

A monthly column from the Moderator, Bruce Reyes-Chow:

We Are Family

The Rev. Bruce Reyes-Chow, Moderator of the 218th General Assembly (2008) of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), offers his reflections on his experience of the church over the few weeks since he was elected as Moderator.

He tells of hearing many voices across the church, reflecting the fact that “a great many realties exist in our church. A number of individuals and communities are filled with pain, frustration, anger, sadness, resignation, and righteous indignation over GA actions.”

Yet, he says, as in a family, “When we are at our most faithful, we will hope more than we could ever imagine that the other will grow fully into who God hopes that person to become.”    His full letter >>


And more thoughts o
n listening ...

On his own moderatorial blog, Bruce Reyes-Chow offers further thoughtful reflections on the need for listening, and what that means for him, and for all of us.    More >>

Church-backed border worker who left water in desert faces federal prison

Judge mulling whether plastic jugs intended for illegal immigrants are litter

Presbyterian News Service reports that a volunteer with a faith-based humanitarian aid group in Arizona – the No More Deaths organization – that receives support from Presbyterians is facing jail time or a fine after leaving 25 water jugs in the desert for undocumented border-crossers.

Magistrate Judge Bernardo Velasco of U.S. District Court is considering whether Daniel Millis, 29, is guilty of littering in Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge by leaving the one-gallon plastic jugs filled with drinking water.    The full story >>

Background on No More Deaths >>

Form of Government Task Force to gather first time post-assembly

Expanded group will revise the report presented to this year’s GA

from Sharon Youngs, Communications Coordinator, Office of the General Assembly

The Form of Government Task Force (FOGTF), expanded in size and loaded with comments from this year’s General Assembly, is scheduled to meet for the first time since the 218th General Assembly adjourned in June to begin revising the original task force’s report.

Three new members will join the original nine when they gather Aug. 21-22, 2008, at First Presbyterian Church in Arlington, VA: Elder Carol Hunley (Pittsburgh Presbytery) and the Revs. Grace Bowen (New York City Presbytery) and Dan Williams (Shenandoah Presbytery).

The full story >>

Stanley Anderson promised large gift to 2006 GA, now charged with securities fraud

Jerry L. Van Marter, of Presbyterian News Service, reported on August 6, 2008:

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has filed civil fraud charges against Stanley W. Anderson, a Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) elder from Colorado who made a dramatic pledge of $150 million to the denomination at the 2006 General Assembly.

The SEC charges that Anderson, 63, and four partners offered short-term returns of up to 1,000 percent through trades in notes issued by European banks. In reality, the agency says, the five conducted a Ponzi scheme, taking more than $5 million from investors and losing it all. Nearly $3 million was used for Ponzi-style payments — where early investors are paid from the money provided by later investors — or was misappropriated, according to the Rocky Mountain News.

Joey Bailey, chief financial officer for the PC(USA), told the newspaper the church had no knowledge of the SEC complaint and that it had not received any money from Anderson’s pledge. "The church will continue to hold Mr. Anderson and his family in our prayers," he said.

8/8/08
"Why LGBT Equality Leads to a More Missional Church"

The Rev. Dr. Jack Rogers, Moderator of the 213th General Assembly, has just posted a thoughtful and helpful essay observing that the actions of the 218th GA, this past June, offers a new way “for all of us to move forward together in mission as one church.”

He notes that there were two main themes of the Assembly’s actions: becoming more fully a “missional church,” and becoming more inclusive by granting “ equal rights to our church members who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT).”

While one theme may seem the concern of conservatives, and the other the focus of progressive support, in fact they can be mutually supportive. He writes: “Think about it – if the goal is for the church to be woven into the very fabric of society – we can’t have preconceived notions about our neighbors. We have to go out with open hearts to preach and practice the message that we are to love God and love our neighbor as ourselves. Affirming the equality of all God’s people is a prerequisite for reaching out in Christian service to all God’s people. So the GA approved overtures to grant equal rights to people who are LGBT and also approved steps to create a more missional church. In so doing, I believe the Assembly found a new way forward.”

So the new version of G-6.0106b will not only advance the cause of fairness and love in our church; it will also be a vital step toward becoming a truly missional church as well.

Read his essay >>

More on the shooting at the UU church in Knoxville

Words really can kill

John Shuck, who pastors a Presbyterian church near Knoxville, reflects on the sad reality that words – and especially words that dehumanize – can kill.     Read his blog >>

Jim Wallis finds “another religious swing vote” in Australia

Sojourners’ Jim Wallis found on a recent visit to Australia that Kevin Rudd, the new Labor prime minister elected last November, benefitted from a surprising shift of evangelical and Pentecostal voters to the Labor Party. He observes that “ the evangelical/Pentecostal swing vote was due to how the agenda is changing in those faith communities. In the past, as in the U.S., issues such as abortion, homosexuality, and cloning seemed to be the primary concerns among the religious. But now the ‘religious agenda’ includes global poverty, climate change, and the rights of Aboriginal people, especially among a new generation of Australian believers.”

Read his article >>

8/6/08 -- Hiroshima Day

At the time this photo was made, smoke billowed 20,000 feet above Hiroshima while smoke from the burst of the first atomic bomb had spread over 10,000 feet on the target at the base of the rising column.


Sixty-three years ago this morning at 8:15 the world changed. This is by David Krieger:

Hiroshima, August 6, 1945


Check this article by Krieger:

The Living Myths About Nuclear Murder: Remembering Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He writes:

Yet, the fate of the world, and particularly the fate of humanity, may hang on how we remember Hiroshima and Nagasaki. If we remember the bombings of these cities as just another point in human history, along with many other important points, we may well lack the political will to deal effectively with the challenges that nuclear weapons pose to humanity. If, on the other hand, we remember these bombings as a turning point in human history, a time at which peace became an imperative, we may still find the political will to save ourselves from the fate that befell the inhabitants of these two cities.

David Krieger is the President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. He is the author of
Today Is Not a Good Day for War.

Today is not a good day for war,
Not when the sun is shining,
And leaves are trembling in the breeze.

Today is not a good day for bombs to fall,
Not when clouds hang on the horizon
And drift above the sea.

Today is not a good day for young men to die,
Not when they have so many dreams
And so much still to do.

Today is not a good day to send missiles flying,
Not when the fog rolls in
And the rain is falling hard.

Today is not a good day for launching attacks,
Not when families gather
And hold on to one another.

Today is not a good day for collateral damage,
Not when children are restless
Daydreaming of frogs and creeks.

Today is not a good day for war,
Not when birds are soaring,
Filling the sky with grace.

No matter what they tell us about the other,
Nor how bold their patriotic calls,
Today is not a good day for war.



Thanks to John Shuck, who posted this on Shuck and Jive on 8/06/2008 08:20:00 AM
8/4/08
Immigration raid in Postville, Iowa, shows serious violations of workers' rights.   

The New York Times condemns the action as " 'The Jungle,' again."  The editorial concludes:

By treating illegal low-wage workers as a de facto criminal class, the government is trying to inflate the menace they pose to a level that justifies its rabid efforts to capture and punish them. That is a fraudulent exercise, and a national disgrace.

The American Immigration Lawyers Association elaborates on the violations of judicial process, calling the whole action "a travesty of justice."

The Synod of Lakes and Prairies reports on actions by Presbyterians to help the many families affected by the raid.

“Let's face reality. Schism is here,” says Lay Committee CEO.

Stephen G. Brown, an elder at First Presbyterian Church of Haines City, Florida, is chairman of the Board of Directors and chief executive officer of the Presbyterian Lay Committee. He has just published on the Layman website one of the clearest and most detailed guides for separation we have yet seen from the Presbyterian Right.

After listing what he regards as the offenses committed by the 218th General Assembly, he makes very specific suggestions for action, including:

 * Form close alliances with other like-minded churches in your presbytery. ...

 * Support the renewal groups by sending letters of encouragement, and giving financial support and your time.

 * Don't send any per capita or mission funds to the GA, your presbytery or the synod, unless you are 100% sure of how the money will be spent. ...

 * Have legal counsel experienced in church property disputes review your property documents. Contact the Presbyterian Lay Committee office if you need a lawyer referral. ...

He concludes: “Only through prayer and a united effort will there be peace in this denomination. Presbyterians have divided many times before and sometimes it has happened in a respectful and civil way. Let's pray for another peaceful process.”

This statement appears under the headline “Peace will follow unity.” But in fact, it seems that for Mr. Brown, peace will come to the PC(USA) only when the Presbyterian Right is allowed to split ... on its own terms.

The full Layman article >>

A little poem about being right


Whenever
we
think
we are
completely
right
righteous

then
perhaps
it is
THE
exact
time to
S T O P

because
it is
in
the sureness
of it
all
that
we
are
most
likely
to stumbleandfallofftheledgeanddropthroughtheairandcrashontheground
kersplush
oops

so when
we-think-we
are right
sometimes
we are really
left
with
the
feeling
that right
may not
be
after all

bobbie g mcgarey 2008 july 27

Thanks to the Rev. Bobbie McGarey

 

Our chronology of PC(USA) dealings with ordination issue has been improved by its author, Gene TeSelle.
8/1/08
Moderator invites suggestions for Task Force appointments

Moderator Bruce Reyes-Chow sent this e-mail on July 29.

We in the Witherspoon Society encourage you to consider submitting your name (or a friend's!) to serve on one of these committees.

As many of you know, one of the privileges and responsibilities of the moderator as a result of most General Assemblies is to appoint people to the various Task Forces, Study Groups and other bodies created by each General Assembly. Coming out of the 218th General Assembly I will have the sole or shared responsibility to appoint members of eight different committees or task forces totally nearly 100 people.

The rest of the note includes information on task forces for which he is seeking members, including those dealing with such topics as Form of Government revisions, marriage and civil unions, the "Restricted Funds Resolution Committee," Middle East Study Group, Heidelberg Catechism, Belhar Confession, the "Climate for Change Task Force," and Youth Ministry.

From School of the Americas Watch:

WHINSEC Commandant's departure reveals controversy

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Colonel Gilberto Perez, the commandant at the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (WHINSEC), formerly known as the School of the Americas (SOA), is leaving the SOA/ WHINSEC and his replacement is Colonel Felix Santiago, formerly stationed in El Salvador. Colonel Perez has presided over a series of practices to increase secrecy at the school, including the refusal to disclose the names, country of origin, rank and dates attended for graduates and instructors at the SOA/ WHINSEC. His remarks last week in a WRBL News interview reveal even more controversy and secrecy surrounding the school.

The departure of Perez, and his replacement by Santiago, brings further attention to the lack of transparency for the SOA/ WHINSEC, as well as the interconnected web of U.S. military training and institutions targeting Latin America.

The full report >>

On the 2008 Intergenerational Peacemaking Conference

Peacemakers hear about global food crisis

Some 270 participants came together from around the globe for the 2008 Intergenerational Peacemaking Conference of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), on the campus of Chapman University in Orange, California, July 15-18.

Focusing on the theme, “Sowing Mustard Seeds: Working for God’s Justice — Confronting Poverty,” the group heard from keynote speaker Anuradha Mittal, executive director of the Oakland Institute, a policy think tank on social, economic and environmental issues. She emphasized that confronting poverty means confronting the international trade policies being imposed on developing nations by the United States, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

More >>

For an index to all our reports
from the 218th General Assembly

For an index to all our reports from the
Witherspoon conference on global mission and justice >>

For posts from all of December, 2009
November, 2009
October, 2009
September, 2009

August, 2009
July, 2009
June. 2009
May, 2009

April, 2009
March, 2009
February, 2009
January, 2009
December, 2008
November, 2008

October, 2008
September, 2008

July, 2008
June, 2008
May, 2008
April, 2008
March, 2008
February, 2008
January, 2008


For links to earlier archive pages, click here.

Some blogs worth visiting

 

PVJ's Facebook page

Mitch Trigger, PVJ's Secretary/Communicator, has created a Facebook page where Witherspoon members and others can gather to exchange news and views. Mitch and a few others have posted bits of news, both personal and organizational. But there’s room for more!

You can post your own news and views, or initiate a conversation about a topic of interest to you.

 

Voices of Sophia blog

Heather Reichgott, who has created this new blog for Voices of Sophia, introduces it:

After fifteen years of scholarship and activism, Voices of Sophia presents a blog. Here, we present the voices of feminist theologians of all stripes: scholars, clergy, students, exiles, missionaries, workers, thinkers, artists, lovers and devotees, from many parts of the world, all children of the God in whose image women are made. .... This blog seeks to glorify God through prayer, work, art, and intellectual reflection. Through articles and ensuing discussion we hope to become an active and thoughtful community.

 

John Harris’ Summit to Shore blogspot

Theological and philosophical reflections on everything between summit to shore, including kayaking, climbing, religion, spirituality, philosophy, theology, politics, culture, travel, The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), New York City and the Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood by a progressive New York City Presbyterian Pastor. John is a former member of the Witherspoon board, and is designated pastor of North Presbyterian Church in Flushing, NY.

 

John Shuck’s Shuck and Jive

A Presbyterian minister, currently serving as pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Elizabethton, Tenn., blogs about spirituality, culture, religion (both organized and disorganized), life, evolution, literature, Jesus, and lightening up.

 

Got more blogs to recommend?

Please send a note, and we'll see what we can do!

 

Plan now for our 2010 Ghost Ranch Seminar!

GHOST RANCH SEMINAR

July 26-August 1, 2010

WE’RE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER
CONFRONTING THE STRUCTURES OF INJUSTICE

 

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