Posted on 11/25/2003 2:51:35 PM PST by LiteKeeper
URL: http://www.ird-renew.org/News/News.cfm?ID=757&c=4
New Clergy Group to Push Liberal Causes Mark Tooley November 21, 2003
Frustrated that they continue to be overshadowed by conservative religious leaders, a new association of politically liberal clergy was announced in Washington, D.C. on November 21. Mostly comprised of old National Council of Churches (NCC) types, the Clergy Leadership Network (CLN) will focus on opposing U.S. military action and fighting for a larger federal welfare state, while criticizing religious conservatives.
Several of CLNs leaders were also formerly leaders in the Interfaith Alliance, another liberal religious group founded ten years ago with the nearly identical purpose of counteracting the Religious Right.
Pennybacker Former NCC official Rev. Albert Pennybacker is the chairman of the new Clergy Leadership Network. Were reaching beyond non-partisanship to engage issues of public life, declared the Rev. Albert Pennybacker, a former leader in both the NCC and the Interfaith Alliance. He said the CLN, of which he is chairman, will model itself after the Hebrew prophets, the champions of justice in Muslim history, and the man from Nazareth.
CLNs unveiling, over which Pennybacker presided, was held at a November 21 pres conference in Washington, D.C. Members of the CLNs national committee include the Rev. Jesse Jackson, the Rev. William Sloane Coffin, Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg, and former NCC chief Joan Brown Campbell.
Also included on the national committee are several United Methodist bishops, the former president of the United Church of Christ, the former president of the Unitarian Universalist Association, liberal Catholic nun Sister Joan Chittister, a Muslim academic, a retired Episcopal priest, the chaplain at Yale University, and a former president of the Southern Baptist Convention (dating to before the conservative ascendancy within the convention).
The United Methodist bishops are Dale White, Marshall Meadors and William Grove, all retired. All three were present at the press conference Thom White Wolf Fassett, former general secretary of the United Methodist Board of Church and Society, is also on CLNs national committee but was not present.
We stand for change, Pennybacker exhorted. Change in the failed policies [of the current administration]. He claimed that CLNs progressive clergy had been turned away when they had petitioned for change directly with the administration.
A special emphasis for CLN will be the unilateral foreign policy atmosphere of imperialism and bullying that runs counter to the inclusive commitments of all religious communities, Pennybacker explained. He bemoaned that the deaths of U.S. military personnel in Iraq have no clear reason or explanation. CLN will also target current economic policies that show favoritism for some.
Joan Brown Campbell Former NCC General Secretary Rev. Joan Brown Campbell The soul of the nation is at stake, Joan Brown Campbell similarly warned at the CLN press conference. As head of the National Council of Churches for about a decade, she gained publicity for turning black church arsons in the south into a national (and some say exaggerated) story. Campbell also spearheaded the return of little Elian Gonzalez to Cuba. Despite her finesse for media attention, she left the NCC nearly bankrupt.
Campbells management style at the NCC, where Pennybacker served as her close assistant, was controversial even among NCC supporters. She, like Pennybacker, was once active with the Interfaith Alliance.
This is a political season, Campbell noted. Our policies are life and death decisions for people around the world. She claimed that all religions oppose exclusion based on sexual preference as well as economic status and ethnicity.
Justice is not just about converting one heart at a time, Campbell insisted, nor is peace a private matter. Changing the nation will mean changing the policy makers, she asserted. Does that make us partisan? she asked. That is for you to decide!
Progressive clergy never sleep and never let anybody else sleep, laughingly noted Rabbi Steven Jacobs from the Los Angeles area. He regretted that the face of religious America was too often linked to the Religious Right or something coming out of the White House. Jacobs warned against a God who is created by White House staffers Andrew Card or Karl Rove or President Bush.
God is not a partisan God, Jacobs continued. This is not a Christian country. And this country does not believe in only one blessing. He said CLN would advocate a kind of religion that is all inclusive.
Dunn Rev. James Dunn A retired lobbyist with the liberal Baptist Joint Committee, the Rev. James Dunn denounced the Bush Administrations faith-based initiative to ensure equal treatment of religious charities by federal agencies as dishonest and down-right dirty. He referred to President Bush as a carpet-bagger who was brought down to Texas from Connecticut at the age of two.
When asked if CLN would take positions on homosexuality and abortion, former Unitarian Universalist Association president John Buehrens claimed the issue of sex was used to distract the American people. He said instead the CLN would spotlight weightier issues such as opposition to war and economic fairness. Although Buehrens noted his own organization had strong [pro-homosexuality and pro-abortion rights] views, he pledged, We will not be divided by issues over whom God has called people to love or the tragic consequences of unplanned pregnancy.
Perhaps conscious of CLNs group of largely retired and aging clergy who are associated with old liberal causes of past decades, the Rev. Otis Moss, a National Progressive Baptist minister from Cleveland conceded when asked, Theres a risk of being called passé. But he insisted that old causes, like the war on poverty from the 1960s were still worthy of support, despite having been demonized by their opponents.
Pennybacker concluded the press conference by saying CLN would be acting in the electoral process without directly endorsing candidates. Were not retreating to non-partisanship, which he said has stifled other activists. CLN has opened a Washington office headed by the Rev. Brenda Bartella Peterson, a Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) minister.
The Institute on Religion and Democracy 1110 Vermont Avenue, NW Suite 1180 Washington, DC 20005 Phone: 202-969-8430 Fax: 202-969-8429
That is, no Christians need apply.
That is, no Christians need apply.Oh, for sure, eh. (sarcasm)
Hopefully, (sarcastic sneer) they will soon have Christians wearing some sort of identifying badge or something so they can be spotted before they cause any real damage.
Sarcasm off. As far as they are concerned, all religions have merit. But not Christianity of any kind except the soon-to-be schismatic Episcopals who finally wised up and welcome and ordain openly gay individuals. Let the other Episcopals break away, they are pleased. It gives them an example of how Christians can 'grow' and 'evolve' to embrace their new inclusive religion. And what happens when they don't.
It's curious to me how they don't/can't see their own flaw. They hate the homophobe Christians, but really, just how many openly gay imams are there? And the fact that Islam preaches against it is not even a tiny issue. Hmmm....
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