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Collection Plates for Communism--The National Council of Churches
Frontpagemagazine/discoverthenetwork ^ | 2-22-05 | DiscoverTheNetwork.org

Posted on 02/22/2005 4:42:56 AM PST by SJackson

The National Council of Churches has a long history of supporting Communist causes -- and condemning the United States and Israel.

NATIONAL COUNCIL OF CHURCHES

475 Riverside Drive
Suite 880
New York, NY
10115

Phone :212-870-2227
URL :http://www.ncccusa.org/

    National Council of Churches's Visual Map


  • Largest coalition of leftwing religious denominations in the United States
  • Has long record of financial support for Communist regimes
  • Remains faithful ally of Communist Cuba 
  • Reserves criticism on moral issues for Israel and the United States
  • Makes common cause with environmentalist radicals
  • Masks leftist politics in faith-based declarations


 

Earlier this month, the National Council of Churches condemned Israel – a nation plagued in recent years by an epidemic of Palestinian suicide bombings aimed at civilians – for having “established hundreds upon hundreds of checkpoints, roadblocks, and gates across the Occupied Territories, making daily life and travel extremely difficult for ordinary Palestinians.” Proclaiming that “[s]tereotypes of all Palestinians as terrorists must be broken,” the Council explained that “[t]he crushing burden of Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territory contributes to deep anger and violent resistance, which contributes to fear throughout Israeli society.” The Council lamented that while “[a]t least half of the Palestinian people live in poverty, . . . too many Israelis have little or no knowledge of the human rights abuses experienced by Palestinians.”

In making the these statements, t
he National Council of Churches offered neither social nor historical context. For example, it did not mention that fully 70 percent of Arabs in the West Bank and Gaza approve of the murder of Jews via suicide bombings; that there is no trace of an Arab peace movement urging the cessation of such terror attacks (a stark contrast to Israel, where the movement demanding concessions to Arabs in the name of peace is a formidable political force); that Palestinians in Israel enjoy more civil and human rights than their counterparts in any Arab nation on earth; that Israel came to occupy the West Bank and Gaza not as a result of expansionist impulses, but rather because of its victory in the 1967 war that was ignited when Israel was attacked by Egypt, Syria and Jordan; that in 1973, yet another coalition of Arab armies attacked Israel and were defeated; and that when Egypt (the spearhead of that 1973 assault) became the lone nation to agree to a formal peace with Israel, it was rewarded by Israel with the return of the entire captured Sinai with all its oil riches.  

The foregoing facts notwithstanding, the National Council of Churches betrays no recognition of the fact that Israel has demonstrated a remarkable willingness to negotiate peace with, and relinquish land to, even defeated aggressors who have previously demonstrated a burning desire to destroy the Jewish state. “[I]t is clear,” maintains the Council, that “the overriding problem is Israel’s continuing occupation of Palestinian territory.” The Council’s critical stance on Israel is mirrored by its history of consistently opposing U.S. policies as well. These two nations are singled out for rebuke by the Council with greater frequency than any others.   

Since its founding in 1950, the New York City-based National Council of Churches (NCC) has remained faithful to the legacy of its predecessor, the Communist front-group known as the Federal Council of Churches, which the NCC absorbed in 1950. At one time an unabashed apostle of the Communist cause, the NCC has today recast itself as a leading representative of the so-called religious Left. Adhering to what it has described as “liberation theology”—that is, Marxist ideology disguised as Christianity—the NCC lays claim to a membership of 36 Protestant, Anglican and Orthodox Christian denominations, and some 50 million members in over 140,000 congregations. 

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the NCC has soft-pedaled its radical message, dressing up its demands for global collectivization and its rejection of democratic capitalism in the garb of religious teachings. Yet the organization’s history suggests that it was—and remains—a devout backer of a gallery of socialist governments. In the 1950s and 1960s, under cover of charity, the NCC provided financial succor to the Communist regimes in Yugoslavia and Poland, funneling money to both through its relief agency, the Church World Service. In the 1970s, working with its Geneva-based parent organization, the World Council of Churches, the NCC supplied financial support for Soviet-sponsored incursions into Africa, aiding the terrorist rampages of Communist guerrillas in Zimbabwe, Namibia, Mozambique, and Angola. 

As one of the leading contributors to the Program to Combat Racism (a program created in 1939 by the NCC-parent group, the World Council of Churches, and discontinued in 1996), the NCC played a central role in subsidizing revolutionary Communist movements in the Third World. Sensitive to the controversy which over the years has enveloped the Program to Combat Racism (PCR), the WCC has consistently declined to divulge both the contributors to, and the recipients of, the program. The WCC has gone so far as to establish an independent budget, the Special Fund to Combat Racism, in order to conceal details about the funding of the program. Despite these efforts, the WCC has not been entirely successful in obscuring the PCR’s paper trail. An August 1982 report by Reader’s Digest revealed that during the 1970s the PCR disbursed over $5 million to some 130 organizations in 30 countries. While the WCC held fast to the claim that the funds were directed solely toward those organizations dedicated to fighting racism, the facts suggested otherwise. According to the Reader’s Digest report, more than half of the money that went to the PCR wound up in the hands of Communist guerrillas. The report further traced PCR funds to a series of Communist rampages in Africa. During the 1970s, over $78,000 went to Cuba’s Soviet-sponsored MPLA to foment Communist revolution in Angola; some $120,000 went to the Marxist FRELIMO in Mozambique; and another $832,000 to Namibia’s Communist regime, the SWAPO; another grant, for $108,000, was funneled to the Patriotic Front in Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia), a Communist guerrilla force whose campaign of indiscriminate terror claimed the lives of 207 white civilians, 1,721 blacks, and nine missionaries as well as their children. In the face of this grim evidence, PCR administratorsmany of whom were culled from the ranks of the NCC—continued to push the line that, rather than bankrolling Communist death squads, the organization was simply supporting “liberation movements.” From this position the WCC has never wavered. In an archival overview of the PRC, published in 2004, the WCC dusted off its claim that “the main aim of the PCR is to define, propose and carry out ecumenical policies and programs that substantially contribute to the liberation of the victims of racism.”

Other beneficiaries of the NCC’s leftist philanthropy included El Salvador’s Sandinista guerrillas. Using the Evangelical Committee for Aid to Development (CEPAD), an organization established to distribute the charity donations collected by U.S. churches in Latin America—and whose leadership openly professed solidarity with the Sandinistas’ Marxist aims—the NCC made common cause with the Sandinista government in Nicaragua, contributing nearly $400,000 to the Sandinista Party between 1981 and 1983. Documents seized from El Salvador’s guerrillas in 1983 revealed yet another Communist group on the take from the NCC’s collection plate.

Another of the NCC’s leftist faith-based initiatives is support for Communist Cuba. Having pushed for the United States to normalize relations with the Castro regime since 1968, the NCC throughout the Cold War pressed its considerable authority on moral issues into the service of whitewashing the hard-line regime’s record of oppression. In 1977, after heading a delegation of American church officials to Cuba, the Methodist bishop James Armstrong, who would be elected NCC president the following year, issued a report that may justifiably be described as supportive of the murderous dictatorship. “There is a significant difference,” Armstrong insisted, “between situations where people are imprisoned for opposing regimes designed to perpetuate inequities, as in Chile and Brazil, for example, and situations were people are imprisoned for opposing regimes designed to remove inequities, as in Cuba.” 

On the rare occasions that the NCC was unforthcoming with a public rationalization for Communist repression, it communicated its support through silence. For example, despite its oft-declared commitment to human rights, the NCC could find little to say about the ascension to power of Ethiopia’s Marxist government, which left 10,000 dead and shuttered 200 churches. Likewise, on the matter of the Soviet Union’s 1978 invasion of Afghanistan, the NCC kept conspicuously mum.

Not until the Soviet Union’s collapse did the NCC see it fit to weigh in on the subject of Communist oppression. In 1993, Joan Brown Campbell, a former NCC General Secretary, made a striking admission. Acknowledging that the NCC had failed to challenge the brutality of Communist rule, she explained, “We did not understand the depth of the suffering of Christians under Communism. And we failed to really cry out under the Communist oppression.”

Campbell’s comments, however, did not prompt the NCC to withdraw its support for Communist totalitarianism. On the contrary, to this day the NCC remains an unwavering ally of the Cuban government. Still pressing for the lifting of the U.S. trade embargo on Cuba, the NCC continues to evince scant concern for the plight of victims of the Castro regime. On occasion, the NCC has even turned against them. No sooner had the NCC used its charity arm, the Church World Service, to establish a Cuban Refugee Emergency Center in Miami, than it soured on the center. The reason was that Cuban refugees had regularly denounced the Cuban government—an outcry that was intolerable to the NCC’s Castro-friendly executives. Kenneth Lloyd, the author of a history of the NCC called From Mainline to Sideline: The Social Witness of the National Council of Churches, noted that one NCC declaration condemned the anti-Castro recriminations of the refugees because they
“abetted our government’s effort to discredit Cuba” and “encouraged humanitarian sentiment that generated hostile attitudes toward Cuba among U.S. congregations.” 

In January of 2000, eager to affirm its Castroite sympathies, the NCC forced itself into the controversy over the fate of Cuban refugee Elian Gonzalez, becoming one of the loudest voices demanding that the boy be sent back to Cuba. Most recently, in January of 2004, the NCC dispatched a delegation of church leaders to Cuba for a six-day visit. NCC spokesmen claimed that, in addition to paying a visit to Havana churches, the delegates intended to discuss with Castro himself the fate of 75 political prisoners jailed by the dictator in 2003. But if an NCC statement was any indication, the delegates had no intention of seriously pressing for the prisoners’ release. The NCC’s only bone of contention was, “We find [their] sentences excessive.” 

This should not be taken to mean that the NCC has been wholly silent on the issue of human rights. The organization continues to issue press releases decrying abhorrent human rights conditions around the world. However, the countries that the NCC chooses to single out for opprobrium evidence the extent to which the organization’s religious mission has been corrupted by its radical leftist politics. One study, conducted by the Institute of Religion and Democracy in September 2004, found that “of the seven human rights criticisms it issued from 2000-2003, Israel received four, the United States two, and Sudan one.” Moreover, the study noted, “Fully 80 percent of the NCC resolutions targeting foreign nations for human rights abuses were aimed at Israel.”

The NCC’s programmatic opposition to U.S. foreign policy is another manifestation of its deep-rooted leftist politics. Taking refuge in the counsel of the New Testament —  “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God” (Matthew 5:9) — the NCC has repeatedly condemned U.S. military interventions. In 1991, the NCC played a central role in The Return of the Peace Movement, a coalition of leftwing religious groups arrayed against the first Gulf war, when American forces repulsed the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. At that time, the leaders of 32 NCC churches announced that the risk of military intervention was “out of proportion to any conceivable gain.” 

The NCC’s assessment of the second Gulf War was identical. In January of 2003, the NCC’s current president, the Methodist preacher Bishop Thomas L. Hoyt, Jr., joined 46 other religious leaders in signing a letter to President Bush. The letter expressed the signatories’ “continuing uneasiness about the moral justification for war on Iraq,” and suggested that the President accord them the “opportunity to bring this message to you in person.” Citing scheduling conflicts, Mr. Bush, through a spokesman, politely declined. Having failed to thwart U.S. military intervention, the NCC did not reconsider its reflexive opposition to U.S. policy following the fall of the Saddam Hussein regime. Rejecting the notion that America could play the role of a post-war peacemaker, the NCC, in May of 2004, issued yet another letter (which it encouraged member pastors to read to their congregations) urging the U.S. to abdicate authority in Iraq in favor of the United Nations. “We would ask that members of our churches, as they feel appropriate, contact their respective congressional delegations to urge the U.S. to change course in Iraq,” the letter noted. The NCC is a member organization of the Win Without War and United for Peace and Justice anti-war coalitions. 

Even as it has traduced U.S. foreign policy, the NCC has continuously injected itself into debates on domestic policy. Here, again, the NCC’s strategy involves veiling its leftwing politics in expressions of religious faith. On more than a few occasions, the NCC has preached the gospel of environmentalism. In 2002, the NCC was a party to an environmentalist campaign against the automobile industry. This campaign — called “What would Jesus drive?” — exhorted car manufactures to embrace stricter emissions standards. It was engineered by the Evangelical Environmental Network, a coalition of left-leaning religious groups that views “‘environmental’ problems as fundamentally spiritual problems.” 

The NCC also levied an opposition campaign against the Bush administration’s environmental initiative, the Clean Air Act. In an ad placed in The New York Times, the NCC framed its agenda in the language of a concerned moral appeal. Wrote the NCC leadership, “In a spirit of shared faith and respect, we feel called to express grave moral concern about your ‘Clear Skies’ initiative—which we believe is the Administration’s continuous effort to weaken critical environmental standards to protect God’s creation.” Nor was this the first time that the NCC employed such tactics. While proclaiming the virtues of the Kyoto protocol in 1998, the NCC’s then-General Secretary, Rev. Joan Brown Campbell, insisted that an acceptance of the (radical) environmentalist movement’s assertions about global warming ought to be made a “litmus test for the faith community.”

The NCC has also expressed concern that the Patriot Act constitutes a trampling on the civil liberties of those living in America, whether they live there legally or illegally. “We believe it is time for us to stop and think about where we should draw the line in our search for security,” said the NCC in 2004. “The 2004 Social Justice Sunday [September 26] theme invites us to consider this issue as a critical point in our history. . . . Only a self-obsessed society pursues security at all costs.”

Recently, some prominent religious figures have voiced concerns that the NCC is less a spiritual than a political organization, less concerned with ministering to the souls of its parishioners than with shaping a future that is in concordance with its leftist agenda. Mark Tooley, a director at the Institute on Religion and Democracy, has taken the NCC to task for positioning itself as an impartial religious group. “We do not think the NCC is impartial. They have been openly sympathetic to the Cuban government for many years,” Tooley told the Washington Times in January 2000. The Rev. Richard John Neuhaus, a former Lutheran minister and now editor of the Catholic journal First Things, has observed that 50 years of rigid adherence to leftwing orthodoxy has taken its toll on the NCC. “The NCC is a shadow of what it once was,” Neuhaus has said. “It has been sidelined. Its 50th anniversary was more of a requiem than a celebration. It has lost the confidence of its membership.” 

Complicating the NCC’s situation is its history of financial mismanagement. While doling out hundreds of thousands of dollars in support of various leftist causes, the NCC been saddled with fiscal woes. The organization’s leadership has long spent beyond its means, and in 1998 the NCC found itself facing a deficit of $1.5 million. In 1999, NCC expenses exceeded total revenues by some $4 million. These budgetary shortfalls have compelled the NCC to appeal to its member denominations—seven of which account for 90 percent of the NCC’s budget—to step up their contributions. For instance, in 1999 the NCC requested that its chief sponsor, the United Methodist Church, increase its yearly contribution of $2.5 million by an additional $700,000.

Despite such stopgap measures, the NCC has proved incapable of reining in spending. In 2002, records showed that the NCC continued to spend 30 percent more than it received, with the United Methodist Church and the Presbyterian Church USA responsible for 64 percent of NCC revenues. The support of the United Methodist Church is of particular importance to the NCC. According to the 2004 Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches, a chronicle of church membership published by the NCC and edited by the NCC Deputy General Secretary for Research and Planning, Rev. Dr. Eileen W. Lindner, the United Methodist Church has recently experienced small declines in membership. That sets it apart from other NCC member churches. Partially as a consequence of growing dissatisfaction with the radical agenda espoused by the NCC’s leadership, many of these churches have suffered a precipitous decline in their membership.

The NCC endorsed the Million Mom March, a May 2000 anti-gun rally in Washington, DC that drew some 750,000 participants and has since evolved into a national organization with the same name. Today Million Mom March is a member group of America Votes, a national coalition of 33 grassroots, get-out-the-vote organizations. America Votes is one of the seven groups forming the administrative core of the Democrat Shadow Party. Its get-out-the-vote efforts and those of NCC target likely Democratic voters, such as swing voters (working women and young people) and Democrat base voters (especially blacks and Hispanics). Among the causes America Votes promotes are environmental extremism, unregulated immigration (Open Borders), and the leftwing agendas of the teachers’ unions. By contrast, it opposes the Patriot Act and gun ownership rights. The coalition’s most pressing objective in 2004 was to defeat George W. Bush in the Presidential election. These are ideals to which NCC similarly subscribes.

The NCC was also a signatory – along with more than 120 other leftwing organizations – to a 2000 campaign to increase the minimum wage.

Compensating somewhat for its sagging private donations of recent years, the NCC has received some funding from a handful of foundations, including: $100,000 from the Ford Foundation in 2000; $149,400 from the Annie E. Casey Foundation in 2000-20001; $150,000 from the Beldon Fund in 2001; $500,000 from the Lilly Endowment in 2002; $50,000 from the Rasmussen Foundation in 2003; and $75,000 from the Rockefeller Brothers Fund in 2003.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: amezion; antioch; bigcogwheelturns; catholic; church; communistagenda; ecusa; elc; elca; greekorthodox; koreanpca; lutheran; nbca; nbcusa; ncc; of; pcusa; polishcatholic; rca; reformedchurch; religiousleft; russianorthodox; serbiancatholic; swedenborgian; syrianorthodox; ucc; ukrainianorthodox; umc

1 posted on 02/22/2005 4:42:59 AM PST by SJackson
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To: SJackson

You know the commies use to say that when they hang the capitalists that the capitalists would sell them the rope.

Transversely, I see it as when people get rich, they send thier offspring to Red Universities and after a generation or two of propaganda by these Ward Churchill clones, they wind up like the middle class Cubans who embraced Castro and wound up loosing all their possessions.....thus awaits the fate of Limosene Liberals.


2 posted on 02/22/2005 4:53:18 AM PST by Vaquero
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To: SJackson
This is the key paragraph out of all of that:

As one of the leading contributors to the Program to Combat Racism (a program created in 1939 by the NCC-parent group, the World Council of Churches, and discontinued in 1996), the NCC played a central role in subsidizing revolutionary Communist movements in the Third World. Sensitive to the controversy which over the years has enveloped the Program to Combat Racism (PCR), the WCC has consistently declined to divulge both the contributors to, and the recipients of, the program. The WCC has gone so far as to establish an independent budget, the Special Fund to Combat Racism, in order to conceal details about the funding of the program. Despite these efforts, the WCC has not been entirely successful in obscuring the PCR’s paper trail. An August 1982 report by Reader’s Digest revealed that during the 1970s the PCR disbursed over $5 million to some 130 organizations in 30 countries. While the WCC held fast to the claim that the funds were directed solely toward those organizations dedicated to fighting racism, the facts suggested otherwise. According to the Reader’s Digest report, more than half of the money that went to the PCR wound up in the hands of Communist guerrillas. The report further traced PCR funds to a series of Communist rampages in Africa. During the 1970s, over $78,000 went to Cuba’s Soviet-sponsored MPLA to foment Communist revolution in Angola; some $120,000 went to the Marxist FRELIMO in Mozambique; and another $832,000 to Namibia’s Communist regime, the SWAPO; another grant, for $108,000, was funneled to the Patriotic Front in Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia), a Communist guerrilla force whose campaign of indiscriminate terror claimed the lives of 207 white civilians, 1,721 blacks, and nine missionaries as well as their children. In the face of this grim evidence, PCR administrators—many of whom were culled from the ranks of the NCC—continued to push the line that, rather than bankrolling Communist death squads, the organization was simply supporting “liberation movements.” From this position the WCC has never wavered. In an archival overview of the PRC, published in 2004, the WCC dusted off its claim that “the main aim of the PCR is to define, propose and carry out ecumenical policies and programs that substantially contribute to the liberation of the victims of racism.”

So can we just tell it like it really is now?

The leftwing campaign against 'racism' has long been a smoke screen for promoting COMMUNISM, and has nothing at all to do with anything remotely resembling an effort to help any other race, not at all.

All one has to do is look at what has happened in Zimbabwe, the Congo, Tanzania and Ethiopia, and what is about to burst out in South Africa, and one can see that the left is only concerned with establishing their own control and the fate of those ruled is irrelevant.

Blacks in America have NOT seen any improvement in their lives since the 1950s. Does this mean that segregation is good for them? Obviously not, but the people that became their leadership class in their community has led them to an even worse fate of moral squalor and economic drought. But no one cares as long as it is a black face that leads them, otherwise it is transparently 'racism'.

This all is fine with the leftwing neoMarxists as long as they control the black community/zimbabwe/South Africa, that is all that concerns them, and their own people will suffer because of it. They add these nations like beads on a string totheir collection of American institutions they control, like the educational system, the entertainment industry and the mainstream media. (Notice how they try to pose as the norm, the 'main stream', when they are really leftwing radicals? Maybe we should start calling them the 'Left Stream Media?)

The next nation on the War on Terror after Iran should be Zimbabwe and South Africa, but that will never happen due to all the outrage that will flow from the black leadership who would rather see millions of Africans die than to see them ruled for even one single day by a predominately white military force.

3 posted on 02/22/2005 4:59:26 AM PST by JFK_Lib
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To: SJackson

LtCol T had these guys pegged over 25 years ago.


4 posted on 02/22/2005 4:59:39 AM PST by petro45acp (Democrat = socialist. Say it loud, say it often, and VOTE!!)
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To: petro45acp

The Roman Catholic Church recently voted to join this organization during the latest Bishops meeting.


5 posted on 02/22/2005 5:57:08 AM PST by Pio (There was no Salvation outside the Roman Catholic Church)
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To: SJackson

The list of suspects can be found here:

http://www.ncccusa.org/members/index.html

* African Methodist Episcopal Church
* The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church
* Alliance of Baptists
* American Baptist Churches in the USA
* The Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America
* Diocese of the Armenian Church of America
* Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
* Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
* Church of the Brethren
* The Coptic Orthodox Church in North America
* The Episcopal Church
* Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
* Friends United Meeting
* Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
* Hungarian Reformed Church in America
* International Council of Community Churches
* Korean Presbyterian Church in America
* Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church
* Mar Thoma Church
* Moravian Church in America Northern Province and Southern Province
* National Baptist Convention of America
* National Baptist Convention, U.S.A., Inc.
* National Missionary Baptist Convention of America
* Orthodox Church in America
* Patriarchal Parishes of the Russian Orthodox Church in the USA
* Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends
* Polish National Catholic Church of America
* Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
* Progressive National Baptist Convention, Inc.
* Reformed Church in America
* Serbian Orthodox Church in the U.S.A. and Canada
* The Swedenborgian Church
* Syrian Orthodox Church of Antioch
* Ukrainian Orthodox Church of America
* United Church of Christ
* The United Methodist Church


6 posted on 02/22/2005 6:35:54 AM PST by PAR35
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To: SJackson

they're after israel and the united states.

you'll have a difficult time explaining this to most jews that vote democrat or christians.

i remember meeting a woman in the early 1980s, m.a. in theology from notre dame, who bragged to me that she was a member of an inside group, allied with liberation theology, that aimed to take over the catholic church.


7 posted on 02/22/2005 6:42:23 AM PST by ken21 (the terrorists didn't blow up the new york times because the times supports them. /s)
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To: SJackson; Badray; GeneralHavoc

Precisely why I left the Methodist Church..........

I think the Southern Baptists are the only congregation that refuses to joing the NCC.

Ping to Badray, GeneralHavoc


8 posted on 02/22/2005 6:51:28 AM PST by Conservative Goddess (Veritas vos Liberabit, in Vino, Veritas....QED, Vino vos Liberabit)
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To: Conservative Goddess

Thanks for the ping, CG.

Hmmm. Maybe this is the reason why I haven't been to church in such a long time -- they're all aiding and abetting the commies. Phyllis Schlafly warned about the NCC back in the 60s.

Has she ever been wrong?


9 posted on 02/22/2005 3:01:18 PM PST by Badray (Quinn's First Law -- Liberalism ALWAYS generates the exact opposite of its stated intent.)
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To: Conservative Goddess; SJackson; yonif; Happy2BMe; Simcha7; American in Israel; ...
Thanks for the note on this on that other thread. Guess I missed this one!  !





If you'd like to be on or off this
Christian Supporters of Israel ping list,
please FR mail me. ~
  -  -
MikeFromFR ~
There failed not ought of any good thing which the LORD had
spoken unto the house of Israel; all came to pass. (Joshua 21:45)

Letter To The President In Support Of Israel ~
'Final Solution,' Phase 2 ~
Warnings ~
10 posted on 02/23/2005 10:42:05 AM PST by Salem (FREE REPUBLIC - Fighting to win within the Arena of the War of Ideas! So get in the fight!)
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To: Alouette; NYer; Mark in the Old South; SirLurkedalot; SunkenCiv; Slings and Arrows; ...

Get a load of this - Ping!

Sadly, not surprising. The World Council of Chuckleheads supported every Marxist "liberation" all through the Cold War. Those serpents haven't changed their scales one bit. May the lot of them be zotted big-time!


11 posted on 02/23/2005 10:56:01 AM PST by Convert from ECUSA (tired of all the shucking and jiving)
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To: Berosus; blam; Ernest_at_the_Beach; FairOpinion; ValerieUSA
Ping!
12 posted on 02/23/2005 10:14:58 PM PST by SunkenCiv (last updated my FreeRepublic profile on Sunday, February 20, 2005.)
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To: SJackson

It has come to our attention, that the state of NC is using a program called "Governor's School" to isolate and indoctrinate 15, 16 and 17 yr olds into the tenets of communism. The program targets 800+ of NC's brightest, but still emotionally vulnerable, young people.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1578140/posts?page=63#63


13 posted on 02/15/2006 7:02:11 AM PST by TaxRelief (Wal-Mart: Keeping my family on-budget since 1993.)
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http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a38e2a594332a.htm

National Council of Churches Want Elian Returned to Castro

Culture/Society Opinion (Published) Keywords: NCC
Source: National Council of Churches Website
Published: March 21, 2000
Posted on 03/29/2000 16:53:40 PST by Bronco Buster


NCC General Secretary Welcomes Ruling In Elian's Case

NEW YORK CITY – "Delighted but not surprised" at a federal judge's ruling that only the U.S. attorney general can grant asylum to Elian Gonzalez, National Council of Churches General Secretary Dr. Bob Edgar today said, "I only wish it had come sooner."

"Elian should have been home before Christmas," Dr. Edgar said. "I urge the Immigration and Naturalization Service to move quickly in returning Elian to his father, grandparents and great-grandmother." Dr. Edgar added that he has left a message for I.N.S. Commissioner Doris Meissner indicating that the National Council of Churches stands "ready to help, if needed."

The NCC and Cuban Council of Churches have been working since December – at first quietly and then publicly – for six-year-old Elian's return to his father and extended family in Cardenas, Cuba. "If a parent is loving, caring and not abusive, a child should be with his or her parent, and Juan Miguel Gonzalez is a loving father," Dr. Edgar said.

The Council's efforts on Elian's behalf were particularly intense and time-consuming in January, when an NCC delegation visited Elian's family in Cuba (Jan. 2-5) and then hosted Elian's grandmothers during their mid-January U.S. visit. "It was worth it," Dr. Edgar said, putting the NCC's efforts on Elian's behalf in the context of the ecumenical body's "commitment to and compassion for all children, whether they are in Mozambique, Bangladesh or held in a house in Miami."

Among lessons from the project: "The federal government needs to move more quickly, and there are limits to what governments can do. People-to-people efforts often bear more fruit," Dr. Edgar said.

He said the NCC will continue to work in collaboration with the Cuban Council of Churches for normalization of relations between the United States and Cuba. -end-


Commentary by Bronco Buster

This NCC is the same group that provided Ministers and Preachers for Clinton which he supposedly met with daily during the Impeachment Hearings proclaiming his time of "public contrition".

The NCC is also the group that came forward during the false black church burnings of 1996 that was blamed on a "white conspiracy" by Clinton, and met with Clinton at the White House legitimizing Clinton's baseless claims. Money that was donated to 'Rebuilding the Burnt Churches' by alarmed Americans went to this group, and one of it leaders was later convicted for embezzling nearly $10 million dollars of these donations for his and his wife's personal use.

The NCC never apologized to any of the donors, burnt church leaders, or to the American public for this flagrant misuse of charitable donations, and have just acted as if nothing out of the ordinary had occurred by this massive public trust fraud.

Also, some of the the leaders of this group, along with many other Clinton supporters, each received a free, taxpayers funded, all expenses paid, trip to Africa during Clinton's extravagant, lavish, multi-city, $40 million dollar, break from Impeachment, African trip.

The leaders of the NCC are the leaders of the "Fanatical Religious Left" who approve of practicing homosexual ministers, advocate virulent socialism, love Hillary, are fervent Democrats, and believe that the literal interpretation of the Bible is the basis of Hate Crimes. The only thing the NCC leaders would find wrong with Sodom and Gomorrah is that there were no condoms, and there was no legalized abortion.

1 Posted on 03/29/2000 16:53:40 PST by Bronco Buster
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14 posted on 02/15/2006 7:13:30 AM PST by TaxRelief (Wal-Mart: Keeping my family on-budget since 1993.)
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To: Pio
The Roman Catholic Church recently voted to join this organization during the latest Bishops meeting.

Are you certain of this, or did someone just bring it up at the meeting? The Church has held off for YEARS, any attempt to push it toward the NCC or the WCC, even with the prevalence of so many lib Bishops. Many of those libs are gone, so I don't see how the more conservative ones would agree to this.

15 posted on 02/15/2006 7:23:54 AM PST by SuziQ
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To: SuziQ
Many liberals are gone? What Roman Catholic Church do you attend? The new Bishop of San Francisco is calling Broke Back Mountain a "profound movie." The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops are more queer than ever.

I watched the WCC vote on EWTN. The irony was that Cardinal Egan voted aginst it as he was very worried about who would do the representing over at WCC. (Probably was afraid a non-homosexual would be sent.) Later Bp. Skystad won the Presidency so I am sure Egan's fears were soothed.

16 posted on 02/16/2006 9:46:09 AM PST by Pio (Four Last Things: Death, Judgement, Heaven and Hell.)
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To: Pio

The newer, younger crop of Bishops don't appear to be the die hard, yellow dog Democrats of old. They may not be as 'Traditional' as some might want, but they are a lot more orthodox than the older guys were, and more willing to speak out for the teachings of the Church.


17 posted on 02/16/2006 9:59:45 AM PST by SuziQ
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