[Mb-civic] Church Folks for a Better America
ean at sbcglobal.net
ean at sbcglobal.net
Mon Feb 21 20:21:45 PST 2005
Hi folks. Altho I myself am not currently a particpant in any
organized religion or religious organization, my readings of how the
right wing has taken power in America by co-opting Christians has
led me to believe that a key component of progressive renewal must
be a powerful progressive faith-based movement. This of course
has a long history in this country, going back to Abolitionists and
forward to Martin Luther King Jr and many many others. And there
are many seeds sprouting now. Below is one which I found
encouraging and inspirational.... Mha Atma
Church Folks for a Better America
02/18/2005
http://www.thenation.com/edcut/index.mhtml?bid=7&pid=2206
George Hunsinger gives the lie to the Right's caricature of
progressives as anti-religious zealots. As a minister, the McCord
professor of theology at Princeton Theological Seminary, and
coordinator of Church Folks for a Better America (CBFA), Hunsinger
is working hard to reframe the "moral values" debate by raising
tough questions about how torture, pre-emption, unjust war, and
poverty can be tolerated by people of moral and religious conviction.
Hunsinger has tapped into a rich tradition of religious progressive
activism--from Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Father Robert
Drinan to Rev. William Sloane Coffin. He shared his thoughts on
Iraq, torture, and the challenges facing progressive religious leaders
in a recent email interview.
******
Torture is not a divisive issue for religious people. No religious
person, and no person of conscience, can possibly justify it morally.
An example of this is an emerging new network of religious
progressives which recently published an "Open Letter to Alberto
Gonzales."
My fledgling organization, Church Folks for a Better America, took
the lead. In a short time we garnered over 225 signatures from a
wide variety of religious leaders: Not only Catholics, Protestants and
Jews, but also Muslims and Sikhs. We also made inroads among
leading evangelicals.
The Open Letter got some good coverage. We were often
mentioned alongside the ex-military lawyers who came out against
Gonzales in press accounts. In the final Gonzales debate, our letter
was quoted on the Senate floor.
Church Folks for a Better America (http://www.cfba.info/) came into
existence almost by accident. On September 12, 2001, I found
myself spending more time on the Internet than I care to remember
trying to get a handle on what was really happening. I could see the
ominous implications for war as well as for a crackdown on liberty at
home. I wrote an Urgent Appeal opposing the invasion of Iraq on
just-war grounds, signed by prominent academic theologians like
Sarah Coakley, Stanley Hauerwas and Nicholas Wolterstorff as well
as activists like Jim Wallis and William Sloane Coffin, Jr., and
published in Sojourners. I started flooding the inboxes of my friends
each day with what I found by scouring the net.
Until the Abu Ghraib torture scandal I was pretty much just a guy
alone in his office with a computer. By that time I had an enormous
backlog of files. I wrote a new statement that I hoped we could run
in the New York Times. I wanted to get it out there before the
"transfer" of power in Iraq on June 30, 2004. When I was unable to
raise the handsome sum the Times requires, a colleague suggested
setting up a website a la Howard Dean. One thing led to another,
and by August CFBA came online. And, with a few large donations
and many smaller ones, An Appeal to Recover America's Moral
Character"--the Dove Ad, as we called it--finally ran in the Times as
a quarter-page ad on the Sunday Op-Ed page just prior to the
presidential election. We also had enough funds to publish the letter
in papers in Pennsylvania and Ohio.
I try to keep the website up-to-date, though as a professor I also
have a day job. The site keeps abreast of Iraq news, in-depth
analysis, good sermons, antiwar poetry and little-known websites.
It used to be said that the right had the wallet but the left had the
pen. But then the Right discovered that if you had the wallet you
could buy the pen. The rightwing take-over of religious discourse in
America is part of a larger trend that has developed over the last 25
to 30 years. The right has learned to be extremely effective in
shaping the political agenda and exploiting religious sensibilities.
Meanwhile, the liberal left has not always been hospitable to
religious people. The renewal of a progressive movement in our
country may well hinge on whether that can change. The Solidarity
movement in Poland, where dissident intellectuals joined hands with
the Catholic Church, is suggestive of what we need here. Jeffrey
Stout's new book Democracy and Tradition is also seminal for the
future of religion and politics in America.
Church Folks for a Better America is dedicated to the idea that the
word "Christian" does not necessarily go with the word "Right." Our
motto, taken from Martin Luther King, is addressed first to the
churches: "A time comes when silence is betrayal." We are a
rallying point for many Christians who are appalled when the
churches remain silent. If the churches cannot speak out against
something like torture, what good is it to have tongues?
The confirmation of Alberto Gonzales was, in effect, a national
referendum on torture. No one in high places has been held
accountable, the Republican-dominated Senate has acquiesced,
and not enough people seem to care. Enormities like torture are
increasingly papered over with democratic rhetoric and pious
falsehoods. Anti-democratic forces in America tighten their grip,
while we suffer from a will to ignorance. The elements of atrocity,
manipulation and indifference add up to a spiritual crisis.
Let me add, however, that to some extent I was heartened by the
quality of opposition to Gonzales. Senators Kennedy, Byrd, Durbin,
and Reed, for example, all made distinguished speeches. They
remind me of the hopes we once had, and might still have, for our
beloved country.
Karl Barth (1886-1968), regarded by many as the 20th century's
greatest theologian [and whom Hunsinger has studied], is, in one
sense, something like Noam Chomsky. He does not fit neatly into
familiar categories. Theologically traditional, he stood on the political
left. Generous orthodoxy, as he represented it, inspires my
intellectual and religious life.
Barth was the theological leader of the confessing church, the
grouping of Protestant churches that resisted Hitler. He was a life-
long democratic socialist. On the war question, he went back and
forth between just-war pacifism and chastened non-pacifism. These
are the parameters of my political views.
As a divinity student at Harvard years ago, I pounded the pavement
for Father [Robert] Drinan during his campaign for the House of
Representatives. It was a particular pleasure for me when, just
recently, he volunteered his signature for The Dove Ad. In 1978-79,
with the Riverside Church Disarmament Program, I served as an
assistant to [Rev.] William Sloane Coffin, Jr. The loose-leaf
anthology and course syllabus I developed on nuclear disarmament,
which we called the Red Notebook, was widely distributed at the
time. You might say that Church Folks for a Better America online is
a successor to the Red Notebook.
Church Folks for a Better America owes a debt to great figures who
have gone before us like Karl Barth, Martin Luther King, and Bill
Coffin. You could look at it as my modest attempt to pay them
tribute.
As for what's next, a larger anti-torture campaign is now in the
works with the following goals: 1) Congressional action to stop
exempting intelligence services from the torture ban imposed on
military services; 2) Congressional action to outlaw the horrifying
practice of extraordinary rendition/torture by proxy; 3) A clear
statement from Bush that US policy does not condone torture in any
form or under any circumstances; 4) The appointment of a special
prosecutor to get to the bottom of the issue.
Our work will also continue against the Iraq war. Destroying entire
cities, as happened with Fallujah, is a form of terrorism, just as
torture is a form of terrorism. Fighting terrorism by terrorism is at
once immoral and futile. It has been clear since Abu Ghraib that the
war cannot be won. The 14 new military bases planned for Iraq
must be exposed and opposed along with the shameless
profiteering still taking place. We join with all who call for an early
and orderly exit, and for reparations for Iraq's long-suffering people.
As our list of supporters grows, we will combine Internet activism
with direct mail and political action. Last fall the Dove Ad campaign
saw seminary students raising money on 12 campuses across the
country. Model sermons and prayers appear on our website along
with alternative news and analysis. Congregations need a deeper
understanding of the just-war tradition. Ordinary believers need to
see the progressive implications of ordinary faith. They need
powerful alternatives to the Religious Right.
We will work in concentric circles, beginning with the community of
faith. Our efforts will be modest. Remember that we have only been
around for six months. Though we will of course join in coalitions
with anyone who shares our concerns, our particular calling is
reaching out to people of faith, including elected officials.
Republican Senators who profess to be believers, for example,
have no business voting for torture. Through creative new faith-
based initiatives, perhaps they too can be reached
--
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"In times of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act."
--- George Orwell
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