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Archives:  October 2006

This page lists all reports and commentary from October, 2006

Postings from earlier in June, 2007
All postings from May
April, 2007
March, 2007
February, 2007
January, 2007
December, 2006
November, 2006
October, 2006
September, 2006
August, 2006

July, 2006

Our coverage of the 2006 General Assembly is indexed on a special page.
For links to earlier archive pages, click here.

10/30/06
The Presbyterian Office of the General Assembly announces:

Form of Government task force issues proposed outline for briefer, leaner polity

October 25, 2006 – LOUISVILLE – Members of the Form of Government Task Force have met only twice since being created by this year’s General Assembly in June, and already they are posting initial drafts of their work online.

A progress report issued by the group at the end of its meeting on October 22, 2006, detailed the work to date. Highlights include "The Foundations of Presbyterian Polity," a proposed new section of the Book of Order that "preserves the basic contents of the present Chapters I-IV but in a reorganized and somewhat shortened form," and a proposed outline for the remainder of the Form of Government. The task force has also produced a sample Chapter One.

Drafts of these documents are available at http://www.pcusa.org/formofgovernment.

A Web site dedicated to the work of the task force will be available in the coming weeks, featuring surveys that will allow readers to share their comments, questions, and insights.

Members of the task force are elder Diana Barber, associate synod executive for leadership, Synod of Lakes and Prairies; elder Cindy Bolbach, attorney, clerk of session, National Capital Presbytery; elder Sharon Davison, attorney, member of committee on ministry, New York City Presbytery; the Reverend Gemechisa Guja, new immigrant pastor, Donegal Presbytery; the Reverend Paul Hooker, executive presbyter and stated clerk, St. Augustine Presbytery, representative to the task force from the Advisory Committee on the Constitution; the Reverend James H Y Kim, pastor, Grace Presbytery; the Reverend Neal Lloyd, pastor, Rochester Presbytery; the Reverend Paige McRight, executive presbyter, Central Florida Presbytery; and the Reverend Stephen Smith, associate executive and stated clerk, Pacific Presbytery.

For more details, see the report from Presbyterian News Service >>

More on the election and values

Questions of ethics are looming large in the coming U.S. elections – from charges of sexual misconduct and corruption to issues of war and peace, "defense of freedom" and/or of "national security," policies condoning torture ... and the list goes on.

We have previously posted a "Christian Voters' Values Guide 2006" prepared by the Christian Alliance for Progress, and a brief note about the guide prepared by Sojourners

If you're still looking for thoughtful pieces on the "values thing," here are two recent contributions:

Two ethics for politics

Brazilian theologian Leonardo Boff, commenting on the coming election in Brazil, offers what might be a helpful way to talk about the ethical issues in our own U.S. elections. He draws a contrast between what he calls the classical ethic of justice, and the newer ethic that has arisen out of feminist perspectives – an ethic of caring.

Such a contrast is vastly oversimplified, but perhaps it could lead to some helpful conversation.

From a progressive point of view, both justice and caring seem to be values we would clearly claim as our own, while in the current American scene, conservatives seem to claim values of freedom and security, along with the virtues of purity and self-reliance.

"We Answer to the Name of Liberals"

In a statement published in The American Prospect, Bruce Ackerman (professor of law and political science at Yale) and Todd Gitlin (professor of journalism and sociology at Columbia University) offer some basic affirmations in the liberal tradition, and lay out the ways in which the present Administration is violating those values -- things such as (in the words of George McGovern) "idealism, democracy, tolerance, and decency."

What do you think of the current values wars?
What values do you affirm as central to this election?
Please send your thoughts,
to be shared here!

George McGovern's new book focuses on war that has been a ‘disaster'
 

Former South Dakota Sen. George McGovern has recently published Out of Iraq, co-authored with Middle East scholar William Polk. Their point is that "out of Iraq" is precisely where the US needs to get. Soon. They argue that the war is doing such severe damage to the United States – financially, psychologically, and in undermining our basic values of idealism, democracy, tolerance, and decency – that for our own sake, as well as for the well-being of the Iraqi people, we should move quickly toward withdrawal.

And what do they propose?

They suggest that America should help fund and create an effective national police force, along with helping to establish an international force that would help police the country until the national force takes shape. Some of the other steps would include the release of all prisoners of war, and closing of all detention centers; support for a national reconstruction corps; removal of all private security firms; support for rebuilding, using Iraqi rather than American firms to do the work; financial reparations to Iraqis for loss of life and property ... and more.

Read the review in the Missoulian >>        Or you can order the book >>>>

Mi Casa es Tu Casa

A Biblical perspective on the current immigration situation

"Immigration has been one of the most contentious issues in United States politics during this past year. It cuts across the typical liberal/conservative divide." So begins an essay by Dr. Lindy Scott, Associate Professor of Spanish at evangelical Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. He gives evidence of this himself, tracing the Biblical roots of a Christian perspective on immigration.

He begins with the basic affirmation that "God is the absolute owner of the earth," and then that "every human being has an intrinsic dignity."  He traces the immigrant history of Israel through Abraham, the Exodus, Ruth and Esther, the prophetic tradition, and finally Jesus as "the immigrant par excellence."

He then looks at the contradictions in American policy – a nation of immigrants oppressing and displacing the "natives" for generations; a nation of capitalists demanding the free flow of capital and products, but not of labor.

The essay >>

And finally, our special scary story for Halloween

A man is walking home alone late one foggy night, when behind him he hears:

BUMP...        BUMP...        BUMP...

Walking faster, he looks back and through the fog he makes out the image of an upright casket banging its way down the middle of the street behind him.

BUMP...    BUMP...    BUMP...

Terrified, the man begins to run toward his home, the casket bouncing quickly behind him

FASTER...  FASTER...

BUMP... BUMP... BUMP...

He runs up to his door, fumbles with his keys, opens the door, rushes in, slams and locks the door behind him.

The casket crashes through his door, with the lid of the casket clapping

clappity-BUMP...  clappity-BUMP...  clappity-BUMP...

on his heels, the terrified man runs.

Rushing upstairs to the bathroom, the man locks himself in. His heart is pounding; his head is reeling; his breath is coming in sobbing gasps.

With a loud CRASH the casket breaks down the door.

Bumping and clapping toward him.

The man screams and reaches for something, anything, but all he can find is a bottle of cough syrup!

Desperate, he throws the cough syrup at the casket...

and.....

(hope you're really ready for this!)

The coffin stops!

10/24/06
Heartland church inadequately examined ordination candidates, top church court rules
GA Permanent Judicial Commission reverses synod, presbytery courts

In a reversal for supporters of inclusive ordination in the Presbyterian Church, the General Assembly Permanent Judicial Commission has reversed two lower-court rulings in favor of a Kansas City, MO, congregation that challenged a neighboring church in its ordination of a woman thought to be a lesbian as an elder.

The report from Presbyterian News Service >>

We welcome comments and analyses of this decision and the wider issue of ordination.
Just send a note, to be shared here.

The church can help heal the wounds of war

Andrew Weaver, a United Methodist pastor and clinical psychologist, describes some of the wounds – especially the internal, psychological wounds – that American soldiers are living with as they return from service in Iraq and Afghanistan. And beyond that, he outlines ways that congregations and pastors can help these trauma survivors move through the vital healing process.

Celebrating turning points in women's ordination

100 years of milestones in the PC(USA)'s efforts to achieve full equality in ministry

The 100th anniversary of women’s ordination in the Presbyterian Church was celebrated at the 217th General Assembly last June. Now the Rev. Eunice Blanchard Poethig reminds us that progress toward a full and equal role for women in the Presbyterian Church has been complex and full of challenges. The author is moderator of the Women's Ordination Mission Team in the Presbytery of Chicago, former executive presbyter for Western New York Presbytery, and former director of the Congregational Ministries Division of the General Assembly Council. And a member of the Witherspoon Society.

The Peacemaking Program Update for Oct. 23, 2006, offers lots of links to resources on such concerns as election-years issues, International Peacemakers, Iran, Iraq, HIV/AIDS, Colombia, coming events ... and more.
10/20/06
A final prophetic word from Bill Gibson:

U.S. needs to consider consequences of its own power

Bill Gibson, Presbyterian minister and one of the strongest voices rousing our church, and many of us individuals, to a respectful and passionate concern for our environment, died on Tuesday, October 17. But even at the end of September he was still writing, reflecting on our nation’s reluctance to come to any real understanding of 9/11.

He suggested that "the American people need to consider whether their nation has too much power for the world's well-being." But he insisted that this means more than just political or even economic power, and so he concluded with this word for us all:

If the American people can rally, organize and struggle to revitalize their own democracy, and if they can drastically reduce their demands on the fragile natural systems and the diminishing resources of the planet, there may be hope that they can become a force for justice and democracy, freedom and peace around the world.

A personal note from your WebWeaver:

Bill was my first "boss" after I finished seminary, supervising me in a two-year internship in the campus ministry at the University of Pennsylvania. He was unfailingly kind and helpful to me, and was also firm in wanting us to do quality work for the students and faculty that we served, and for the wider church and community. Seeing him has been one of my great pleasures in attending General Assemblies over the past couple decades. I will miss him, and I know I’m not alone in that. Many of us will miss him as a friend, and will miss his voice in our church, calling us to continue witnessing and working for peace and justice, and for loving, faithful stewardship of the creation.


Len Bjorkman, a leader in the Presbyterian Peace Fellowship and a long-time friend of Bill’s, sent this word of his death:

I'm sorry to tell you that Bill died Tuesday night. There will be a service at First Presbyterian Church, Ithaca, NY on Saturday, October 28.

He had a bad stroke last week. He was recovering from a fall about 6 weeks ago. This last year was a tough one for him, but his mind was just as engaged almost all the time. He was the primary leader within our church and elsewhere for eco-justice for two generations, and will be sorely missed.

We invite you to hold his wife, Judy, and the rest of their family in your prayers, and to remember in prayer, too, his commitment to God’s wondrous work of Creation.

Bill’s final essay appeared in The Ithaca Journal, September 29, 2006 >>

Doug King

10/19/06
Winning or losing in Iraq?

The group Faithful America urges us to reflect on the current state of the war in Iraq, to ask whether we’re winning or losing (whatever that may mean), and to pray and vote for peace.

More on 9/11 and suspicions of a conspiracy

We reported a few weeks ago on the book Christian Faith and the Truth Behind 9/11: A Call to Reflection and Action, in which theologian David Ray Griffin puts questions about the 9/11 event in a deeper perspective – and gives reasons for deeper concern.

Now Presbyterian Outlook has provided two helpful responses to Griffin’s book.

Chris Iosso, who is the coordinator for social witness policy of the Presbyterian Church (USA), considers Griffin’s case for the existence of some kind of conspiracy to set up attacks on US targets, for the purpose of consolidating power in the hands of the Administration in Washington.   Iosso's comments >>

Scott Leslie, pastor of First Church of Allen, Texas, focuses on the second half of the book, which deals with "the existence of evil, the rise of demonic power, and the comparison of current American policy to the actions of Imperial Rome."  He finds this line of thought interesting, but finally regrets that "what is lacking in Griffin’s presentation is any sense of hope."   Leslie's comments >>

The Devil Wears Prada and Drives a Hummer
The faithful join forces to fight reckless consumption

Utne Webwatch provides a quick guide to some good articles on the growing commitment of people of faith to dealing with environmental issues and consumerism. These efforts reflect growing "concern for the planet and the spirituality of the people who live on it."

The survey article begins:

"Buy, buy, buy. Sell, sell, sell," goes the mantra of the capitalist. But our disposable lifestyle has gotten us into quite a mess, and if there's one thing all the talk about biofuels and wind power confirms, it's that we can't buy more space on the planet to fulfill our food and energy needs or sell our way out of the environmental damages we've already inflicted. Many on the left see the stereotypical conservative Christian consumer as the villain in this story -- Bush crystallized the image with his post-9/11 call for Americans to open their pocketbooks and ward off economic collapse. Giving the lie to that stereotype are the leagues of religious groups looking inward -- and to each other -- to find an escape from the consumerist trap responsible for the current state of planet Earth.

The survey article links to the stories mentioned there >>

CIW farmworkers’ truth tour heads for Chicago 

Here’s the latest report from The Rev. Noelle Damico, PC(USA) Associate for Fair Food

You can also read the Presbyterian News Service article on the Mini Tour

Health care and America’s families

Families USA points us to a number of new reports and other resources on the Web, that provide information and ideas for action on health insurance for American employees, families, children ... and more.    See their listing >>

10/12/06
TAKE ACTION: HELP EDUCATE VOTERS

Christian values and the coming elections

The Christian Alliance for Progress has prepared set of brief points as a guide for progressive Christian voters in the coming elections. We recently mentioned another such guide, prepared by Sojourners.

Here is their summary, with links to short essays on each of the points.

Tom Driver urges action against the impending U.S. war on Iran  

For over a year Scott Ritter has been saying that war against Iran is inevitable. Last spring Seymour Hirsch reported in The New Yorker that war preparations were being made. Now comes Chris Hedges saying that warships are being put in position and an attack by the U.S. is likely within weeks.

Please read what Hedges has to say >>

Hedges was a war correspondent for 20 years. He knows what he's talking about.

I think the only thing that might stop a new war is the knowledge in Washington that the American people won't support it. Please talk to your friends and neighbors. Word of mouth can be more effective than mass media. Tell people to tell other people -- and to call both the White House and the local offices of their members of Congress. The message: We won't support a new war.

Tom F. Driver

Tom Driver is the Paul Tillich Professor of Theology and Culture Emeritus, Union Theological Seminary in New York.  Tom, with his wife Anne Barstow, received Witherspoon’s Andrew Murray Award at our luncheon during the 217th General Assembly.

A Proposal to Use Girardian Anthropology to Analyze and Resolve the Present Challenge to the "Peace, Unity and Purity of the Church"

by the Rev. Britton W. Johnston  

Britt Johnston and his wife participated in the Witherspoon "Dancing with God" conference on mission at Stony Point in September, 2005, just before leaving for a second term in Colombia as accompaniers. Currently living in Iowa, he is a Member at Large of the Presbytery of Santa Fe.

He has written this essay in an effort to offer some fresh thinking for the Presbyterian debate on sexuality and ordination.

Following the "mimetic theory" of French anthropologist René Girard, he suggests that we radically revise our thinking about sexuality, about morality, and about human desire. Our thinking about sexuality, he says, is shaped by our human (and religious) need to structure our world into "differences," just as the Hebrew people saw creation as God’s acts of differentiating – light from dark, land from water, and all the rest. But the Biblical faith sees these differences as never to be granted sacred status.

We must also recognize, he goes on, that our notions of sexuality and sexual desire are culturally conditioned, and that desire is by no means a "good thing" in itself. So liberals must recognize their error in considering desire (of whatever kind) a legitimation for sexual relationships (of whatever kind). And conservatives need to get over their conviction "that so-called ‘biblical’ standards are divine absolutes."

Finally, he urges both sides to follow Calvin in regarding ordination as less than sacred. Then perhaps conservatives could be less anxious about "protecting" it, and liberals less determined to claim its supposed sacredness to give full legitimacy to the place of lgbt people in the church.   For the full essay >>

East Tennessee church will host a "Jesus Seminar on the Road," Nov. 3-4

Focus will be on faith communities in the 1st and 21st centuries with an emphasis on the emerging progressive movement across the country.    Details >>

More on the CIA and torture

Pres. Bush has admitted to the outsourcing of torture (known in polite Administration circles as "rendition").

In These Times interviews A.C. Thompson, one of the co-author of the new book Torture Taxi: On the Trail of the CIA’s Rendition Flights, which details how the CIA transports these "detainees" around the globe.

Religious Right's 'Liberty Sunday' is yet another vehicle for gay bashing, says Americans United

The Washington, D.C.-based Family Research Council (FRC) is sponsoring the Oct. 15 event, which it describes as an examination of how the gay-rights movement allegedly threatens religious liberty. The gathering will take place at Tremont Temple Baptist Church in Boston and it will be simulcast to churches throughout the nation. (Ann Romney, wife of Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, has agreed to speak.)

The Rev. Barry W. Lynn, Americans United executive director, noted that in September the FRC and allied groups held a "Values Voter Summit" in Washington that featured copious amounts of gay bashing and attacks on church-state separation. Lynn said he expects more of the same during "Liberty Sunday."

The full news release from Americans United >>

10/2/06
The fight is not over for the America we believe in

Following Congress' passage of the Military Commissions Act, approving actions that certainly look like torture, and military trials with no constitutional protections, Amnesty International issued a brief statement of the ways in which this action is a betrayal of American values, with a call for continuing action of behalf of human rights.

Two more witness-participants report on action for peace in D.C.

We’ve already shared the report on the witness for peace held in Washington this past Tuesday, September 26, through the Presbyterian News Service report on the arrest of former PC(USA) Moderator Rick Ufford-Chase.

We now have good reports from two other participants in the action >>

Sojourners provides a guide to "voting God’s politics"

Sojourners/Call to Renewal has just produced 150,000 copies of Voting God’s Politics: An Issues Guide for Christians for Election 2006. While in the past such guides have often been used in divisive ways by other organizations to narrow the issues or mobilize voters around one party or candidate, they believe this issues guide provides a biblically centered framework to inspire prudential voting decisions in this year’s election. They are offering copies of this issues guide free to you to distribute. They invite you to commit to distributing 25 of these to your congregation, friends and colleagues. Or 50. 100? They offer this as a way to lift up a broad set of moral issues this election season.

This page lists all reports and commentary from October, 2006

Postings from earlier in June, 2007
All postings from May
April, 2007
March, 2007
February, 2007
January, 2007
December, 2006
November, 2006
October, 2006
September, 2006
August, 2006

July, 2006
June, 2006
 
May, 2006

April, 2006
March, 2006
February, 2006
 January, 2006

Our coverage of the 2006 General Assembly is indexed on a special page.
For links to earlier archive pages, click here.

 

A major
Ghost Ranch event this summer!

July 28 - August 3, 2008

Paths toward Peace and Justice:

Spirituality, Earth-Care, and the Prophetic Word in a time of Violence

More info >>

 

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BECOMING NEIGHBORS:
An Invitation
to Global Discipleship

A Witherspoon conference
on global mission and justice

September 16 - 19, 2007
Louisville, Kentucky

 

Check out our report from the Conference
on
Terror, Torture,
and Security

 

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© 2007 by The Witherspoon Society.  All material on this site is the responsibility of the WebWeaver unless other sources are acknowledged.  Unless otherwise noted, material on this site may be copied for personal use and sharing in small groups.  For permission to reproduce material for wider publication, please contact the WebWeaver, Doug King.  Any material reached by links on this site is outside the control and responsibility of the WebWeaver and The Witherspoon Society.  Questions or comments?  Please send a note!