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Showing posts with label Circle of Protection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Circle of Protection. Show all posts

01 January 2016

CELEBRATING THE REASON FOR THE SEASON OR JUST CHRISTMAS? & Parables For Understanding A Nation's Racial 'Sin' 11OKT15

 We must talk about poverty..:
We just finished celebrating Christmas 2015, but we should ask ourselves why? AMERICAN POVERTY, there is no Christian justification for the number of people living in poverty in the U.S., no Christian justification for the severity of the poverty they are living in. As we celebrate the gift of God's only Son, Jesus, this Christmas season, we would do well to consider the teachings of Jesus Christ about faith, salvation, social justice, the poor, and greed. Real, honest contemplation of Christ's principle teachings on Christianity with real, honest comparisons of the 2016 presidential candidates campaigns and speeches should make it very clear who in the race is actually concerned about and has proposals to deal with American poverty and who is controlled by, owned by and will continue to serve the rich and powerful, corporate America, the 1%. Below is an interview of JimWallis of +Sojourners from +NPR addressing the problems of poverty and racial discord in the U.S. +Senator Bernie Sanders , Democratic candidate for president in the 2016 presidential election, is the only candidate who consistently mentions the poor, working class and middle class in his campaigning and blast the deceptive manipulation of the economic uncertainty of the 99% by the republican party presidential candidates. Check out the interview with Jim Wallis and go to Bernie 2016 for information on his plans to alleviate American poverty. There is a link to the +The Circle of Protection site with the videos and transcripts of Democratic and republican 2016 presidential candidates positions on American poverty at the end of this post. You decide who expresses the most Christian views on poverty.

Rev. Jim Wallis leads the Christian social justice group Sojourners. He is known for merging faith with public life, urging candidates for office to discuss moral issues in a way that transcends ideological divisions. Michel Martin talks with Wallis about his book America's Original Sin: Racism, White Privilege and the Bridge to a New America.
MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:
If you're interested in the nexus of faith and politics, then the Reverend Jim Wallis is a name you probably know. He leads a Christian social justice organization called Sojourners. But he was also one of the people behind the 2008 Compassion Forum that aimed to press candidates to discuss moral issues in a way that transcended ideological divisions. He's also the author of a number of books, and his latest forthcoming work is called "America's Original Sin: Racism, White Privilege And The Bridge To A New America." And the Reverend Jim Wallis is with us now. Reverend Wallis, thanks so much for being here.
REVEREND JIM WALLIS: Great to see you again.
MARTIN: So first, to the book - I mean, you've written many, many books. This is - what? - number 12, I think. Why this topic now?
WALLIS: When Trayvon Martin was shot and killed, I felt - you might call it the lament of a white father. I knew and the whole country knew that my son Luke - six-foot-tall baseball athlete, going to college next year - had been walking and doing the same thing, same time that Trayvon was doing in Sanford, Fla., everyone knows he would've come back. But Trayvon didn't come back, and so it was a parable. Jesus talked about parables. They teach us things. Michael Brown - Ferguson - was a parable. Charleston was a parable. The parable about where we are as a nation - we have to see our original sin and how it still lingers in our criminal justice system.
MARTIN: And what is the original sin?
WALLIS: Well, the original sin is - I have this sentence in the book - the most controversial sentence I ever wrote - this nation was founded by the near genocide of one people and the kidnapping of another people to build this nation. So slavery and the indigenous destruction of those who were here - that was our original sin. And it still lingers in our criminal justice system - in most of our systems.
And so the book talks about how to go deeply into that to understand what's happening here and then to see how these events - these shootings of young black men and women losing their lives in custody - are parables. They have to teach us what repentance doesn't mean just saying you're sorry. Or feeling guilty means turning and going in a whole different direction.
And so I'm writing this as a white man, and I'm saying that in this society, no matter where I live or what I do or who my friends are or even if I try to work to overcome racial and criminal injustice, I can never escape white privilege in this society - just like my friends, my colleagues can't escape what it means to be black or brown in this country. And if we are people of faith - I say in the book if white Christians were more Christian than white, black parents would have less to fear for their children.
MARTIN: In fact, the book itself seems to be rather explicitly aimed towards the white Christian reader. Am I right about that?
WALLIS: You are because I was stunned by how the responses to the shootings of young black men just really fall along racial lines. So many white people would say, well, it's the incident. It's the circumstance. It's what he or she did or didn't do. And for black people, this is a pattern, structure, experience. I'm a Little League baseball coach, and all my black kids on the team - their parents have the talk - how to behave, how not to behave, what to do, not to do if there's a man - a cop or a man with a gun. And none of the white parents have that talk. None of the white parents even know the talk happens.
MARTIN: I referenced earlier the Compassion Forum, which was a forum at Messiah College in 2008 where a candidates - Senator - then-Senator Barack Obama - then-Senator Hillary Clinton was invited to participate. Senator John McCain was invited to participate. He ended up not participating, but he did participate in a conversation later on in the year with the Reverend Rick Warren.
But I was noting that among the people endorsing the idea of the Compassion Forum at the time were Governor Mike Huckabee, who's now another candidate for president, Rick Santorum, former United States senator - both evangelicals. You belong to the evangelical tradition, as well. Why is it that, you know, their priority seems very different, as people who are running for office and for whom their faith is also important? Why is it that you think that, you know, you're all evangelicals, and you belong to this tradition, and yet you see the priority very differently?
WALLIS: Look at - we had our political conversation changed just here in town by Pope Francis. I have never seen the gospel - the gospel values - proclaimed at the highest levels of power in this country. I was at the White House welcoming ceremony in the Congress, and here is the Pope saying how we treat the marginal - those are on the outside, left behind - is a faith issue, is a gospel issue.
In between his eloquent proclamations, he went and spent time with those very people - lunched with the homeless in D.C., with prisoners in Philadelphia - living the gospel and not just proclaiming it. And that said very clearly, if you want to apply gospel values to politics, you got to deal with those who are marginal, vulnerable, left outside. That's all over the Bible.
MARTIN: Do you see any opportunity for the two sides to coalesce around some things that you might all care about - those of you who both proclaim this faith, but whose priorities seem to be somewhat different at this point?
WALLIS: Well, we had this big coalition called the Circle of Protection put together to in all these debates about budgets and spending - to protect low-income people. We've been doing this for a number of years. We asked all the candidates to submit a three minute video on how they would approach property, how they'd treat the poor, how they would deal with this issue, globally and domestically. We've got 10 videos in so far, and this is going to put, we think, poverty on the agenda. Republicans and Democrats have to answer the same question, and they're saying different things. And that's a good debate to have, but you've got to say, unless we are committed, as a fundamental priority, to lift people out of poverty, help them lift themselves out of poverty, how are you going to do that? And let's have a debate about that.
MARTIN: The first Democratic debate of the season is scheduled for Tuesday. What are you hoping to hear?
WALLIS: Well, you know, I was up on the Hill two days after the Pope was here. We met with leaders in both parties, and the whole purpose was - in light of what the Pope said, what are you going to do now about the issues facing low income people this file in the Congress? And, you know, the truth is Democrats haven't talked as much about the poor as the Pope did when he was in the Congress. And Republicans are just beginning to talk about poverty as a concern. We're saying what does that mean? What does that mean?
So what I hope is CNN asks the kinds of questions that Pope Francis said are central to what it means to seek and serve the common good. But I care less about what a candidate says about how devout they are, how often they pray, how deep their faith is. I want to know what it means - what it means for their leadership and for their policies. And if the poor, the earth and strangers, immigrants aren't there, prisoners aren't there, then I don't hear the gospel in what they're saying.
MARTIN: Jim Wallis is president and founder of Sojourners. He's also editor-in-chief of Sojourners magazine. He's the author of many books. His latest forthcoming book is "America's Original Sin: Racism, White Privilege And The Bridge To A New America." And he spoke with us in Washington, D.C. Reverend Wallis, thanks so much for speaking with us.
WALLIS: Blessing to be here.
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Circle of Protection

Candidate Videos

Over 100 Christian leaders have asked each presidential candidate, “What would you do as president to offer help and opportunity to hungry and poor people in the United States and around the world?” These videos, produced by the campaigns, are their response. The Circle of Protection presents them without comment or endorsement. We encourage church, college and seminary groups to view and discuss the videos. A study guide is available.
  

14 September 2012

What About Hungry and Poor People? Barack Obama's and Mitt Romney's Views 12SEP12

PRESIDENT Obama and mitt romney have responded to our calls for them to address the issue of American poverty in their presidential election campaigns. Below are their video responses and the transcripts of their statements. We need to keep up the pressure, so after listening to each candidate check out my earlier post THE LINE (THIS IS WHAT POVERTY LOOKS LIKE IN AMERICA) & HAVING OUR SAY (AMERICAN POVERTY AND THE PRESIDENTIAL DEBATES) 8&7SEP12 http://bucknacktssordidtawdryblog.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-line-this-is-what-poverty-looks.html
and tweet both candidates and the presidential and vp debate moderators to make sure American poverty is an issue they must address on the campaign trail, during the debates and in their policy platforms. From Sojourners and The Circle of Protection....
Today Sojourners released 2 amazing videos, and we wanted you to be the first to see them.
As part of our ongoing work against poverty, Sojourners and our coalition partners with the Circle of Protection asked the presidential candidates what they were going to do about poverty – the most important issue of our time.
The presidential candidates just responded to us. We still have a long road ahead of us this election season to make poverty a top issue, but for today, let’s celebrate this huge moment together.

FROM THE CIRCLE OF PROTECTION 

What About Hungry and Poor People?
Barack Obama's and Mitt Romney's Views

Why We Sought Their Views
On July 6, 2012, Circle of Protection leaders invited the presidential candidates — President Barack Obama and Governor Mitt Romney — to submit short video statements.
"We believe that this presidential campaign should include a clear focus on what each candidate proposes to do to provide help and opportunity for hungry and poor people in the United States and around the world," they wrote.
The leaders emphasized that God holds nations accountable for how those Jesus called "the least of these" (Matthew 25:45) are treated.
The Circle of Protection is composed of more than 65 heads of denominations, relief and development agencies, and other Christian organizations representing a wide array of churches in the U.S.A.
The Circle of Protection does not support, oppose or in any way endorse either of these presidential candidates.
Learn more about the Circle of Protection »

Watch the videos below:


President Barack Obama:
Last year, I had the privilege of meeting with the Circle of Protection at the White House. There I
reflected on my own Christian faith and how it’s shaped my walk in life, how I believe it’s made me a
better husband, a better father, and I hope, a better president. My faith teaches me that poverty is a
moral issue. The Bible calls on us to be our brother’s keeper and our sister’s keeper, and I believe that as
a public servant, I must do my part to answer that call. When I hear the story of a single mom struggling
to put food on the table, or a child born into poverty, or a dad who’s gone months without a paycheck, I
cannot sit idly by, not as a person and certainly not as a president.
That’s why I’ve fought to keep this a country where everyone who works hard has a basic sense of
dignity and a chance to get ahead. That means things like good jobs and good wages, healthcare that’s
there for you when you get sick, a secure retirement even if you’re not rich, a chance to buy a home to
call your own, and an education that gives our young people every chance in life. I believe that even as
we work hard to get ahead, we also have the obligation to reach back and help others get ahead, too.
That’s why my Office of Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships has expanded its work with groups
around the country to help those in need. And it’s why last year, in the midst a heated budget debate in
Washington, I promised to protect vital assistance for the least of these. I’ve kept that promise. We can
pay down our debt in a balanced and responsible way, but we cannot balance the budget on the backs
of the most vulnerable. And certainly can’t ask the poor, the sick, or those with disabilities to sacrifice
even more, or ask the middle-class to pay more, just so we can offer massive new tax cuts to those
who’ve been blessed with the most. It’s not just bad economics, it’s morally wrong. It’s not in line with
our values, and it’s not who we are as a people.
I know you share my belief that government can’t solve every problem and it shouldn’t try. I learned
from my mother that no education policy can take the place of a parent’s love and attention. As a young
man I worked with a group of Catholic churches who taught me that no government program can take
the place of a caring neighbor. Not every tax dollar is spent wisely. Not everyone can be helped who
refuses to help themselves. But that’s not an excuse to tell our fellow Americans that they’re on their
own. We are all in this together as one people, one American family, one nation under God. That’s how we’ll create a true circle of protection. And if we each do our part, we can build an economy that works for all of us, and leaves something better for our children.
There have been many times over the past for four years when I have fallen on my knees asking God for guidance, not just in my personal life and my Christian walk, but in the life of this nation. I want you to know I have been so grateful for your prayers. And I pray His richest blessings on each of you. Thank
you. God bless you and may God bless the United States of America.
Governor Mitt Romney:
Hello, I’m Mitt Romney. And I appreciate the opportunity to share my plan to protect the poor and
vulnerable among us. And I want to start by thanking all who’ve already answered the call to care for
those in need. Both here at home and around the world, good people of faith have dedicated
themselves to improving the lives of the less fortunate, providing aid and comfort in places that were
once without hope. These kind acts reveal the good heart of America. Coming to the aid of those in need
is a critical mission. And it’s more important now than at any other time in recent memory.
As I speak with you today, there are 23 million Americans struggling to find work. A record 46.7 million
people are on food stamps. Nearly one in every six people in America is in poverty. When our economy
is weak, lives are shattered, hearts ache, parents wonder how they’ll make ends meet, and how they’ll
provide better lives for their children.
I’m running for president because I believe we can and must do better. If we’re going to help lift our
brothers and sisters out of poverty we must restore our economy and reduce the debt. When our
economy is healthy and growing, we have the resources to take care of those who still find themselves
in need. That’s why we must deliver the recovery we have all been waiting for, and the jobs too many
Americans are still looking for.
My vision for recovery starts with jobs, a lot of jobs, and I have a five-part economic plan that will help
create 12 million new jobs by the end of my first term in office. More jobs will mean more opportunities.
It’ll mean good wages that pay the bills and put food on the table. It will mean fewer people on the
welfare rolls and more people on the payroll. A strong economy will reduce our budget deficits, and it
will reduce poverty as well. But at this point, budget cuts are also going to be necessary and I intend to
make them. Here you have my word: I’ll proceed carefully. I understand this is a delicate task. Our
government rightfully provides a safety net for the hungry and the homeless, the sick and the elderly,
and we have a responsibility to keep it intact for future generations. I’ve laid out a sensible plan to save
and strengthen our nations’ entitlement programs, which now account for more than half of federal
spending. Here again, I’m committed to protecting those in or near poverty. For example, I support
means testing, where more money goes to those in need, and a little less goes to those who are able to support themselves. And I recognize that the assistance provided by your organizations can mean the difference between life and death for someone who’s sick or starving. That’s why my administration will stand with faith-based organizations, instead of standing in their way. If I’m elected president, I will seek the counsel of faith-based community leaders on matters large and small. And I’ll support your work.
Together we’ll ensure that those who need our help remain within the circle of protection.
http://www.circleofprotection.us/index.html

 

15 May 2011

CIRCLE OF PROTECTION (A CALL FOR A MORAL BUDGET) 21APR11

SIGNATORIES of the Circle of Protection Statement to Congress and President Obama. I can't help but wonder why nobody from focus on the family, the family research council, concerned women of america, the heritage foundation, liberty university, bob jones university, just to name a few of the conservative Christian organizations that have not signed this statement since family values is supposed to be the focus of their organizations. What could be more pro family than the goals as outlined in this statement?
A Circle of Protection:
A Statement on Why We Need to
Protect Programs for the Poor
In the face of historic deficits, the nation faces unavoidable choices about how to balance needs and resources
and allocate burdens and sacrifices. These choices are economic, political—and moral.
As Christians, we believe the moral measure of the debate is how the most poor and vulnerable people fare. We
look at every budget proposal from the bottom up—how it treats those Jesus called “the least of these” (Matthew
25:45). They do not have powerful lobbies, but they have the most compelling claim on our consciences and
common resources. The Christian community has an obligation to help them be heard, to join with others to insist that programs that serve the most vulnerable in our nation and around the world are protected. We know from our experience serving hungry and homeless people that these programs meet basic human needs and protect the lives and dignity of the most vulnerable. We believe that God is calling us to pray, fast, give alms and to speak out for justice.
As Christian leaders, we are committed to fiscal responsibility and shared sacrifice. We are also committed to resist budget cuts that undermine the lives, dignity, and rights of poor and vulnerable people. Therefore, we join
with others to form a Circle of Protection around programs that meet the essential needs of hungry and poor people
at home and abroad.
1. The nation needs to substantially reduce future deficits, but not at the expense of hungry and poor people.
2. Funding focused on reducing poverty should not be cut. It should be made as effective as possible, but not cut.
3. We urge our leaders to protect and improve poverty-focused development and humanitarian assistance to promote a better, safer world.
4. National leaders must review and consider tax revenues, military spending, and entitlements in the search for
ways to share sacrifice and cut deficits.
5. A fundamental task is to create jobs and spur economic growth. Decent jobs at decent wages are the best path out
of poverty, and restoring growth is a powerful way to reduce deficits.
6. The budget debate has a central moral dimension. Christians are asking how we protect “the least of these.”
“What would Jesus cut?” “How do we share sacrifice?”
7. As believers, we turn to God with prayer and fasting, to ask for guidance as our nation makes decisions about our
priorities as a people.
8. God continues to shower our nation and the world with blessings. As Christians, we are rooted in the love of God
in Jesus Christ. Our task is to share these blessings with love and justice and with a special priority for those who
are poor.
Budgets are moral documents, and how we reduce future deficits are historic and defining moral choices. As
Christian leaders, we urge Congress and the administration to give moral priority to programs that protect the life
and dignity of poor and vulnerable people in these difficult times, our broken economy, and our wounded world.
It is the vocation and obligation of the church to speak and act on behalf of those Jesus called “the least of these.”
This is our calling, and we will strive to be faithful in carrying out this mission.

Circle of Protection Signers
April 21, 2011
Leith Anderson President National Association of Evangelicals
Dr. Carroll A. Baltimore, Sr. President Progressive National Baptist Church
David Beckmann President Bread for the World
Geoffrey Black General Minister and President United Church of Christ
Bishop Stephen E. Blaire Bishop of Stockton and
Chairman, Committee on
Domestic Justice and Human
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
Bishop Charles E. Blake Presiding Bishop Church of God in Christ
Bishop Claire S. Burkat Bishop of Southeastern Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
J. Ron Byler Executive Director Mennonite Central Committee
Bishop Minerva Carcaño Bishop of the Southwest United Methodist Church
Very Rev. Thomas P. Cassidy, SCJ President Conference of Major Superiors of Men
Dale Evans US President Food for the Hungry
Daniel Garcia International Coordinator Kairos Prison Ministry International
Wes Granberg-Michaelson General Secretary Reformed Church in America
Ken Hackett President Catholic Relief Services
Ambassador Tony Hall Executive Director Alliance to End Hunger
Dick Hamm Executive Director Christian Churches Together in the USA
Bishop Mark S. Hanson Presiding Bishop Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Herman Harmelink III Ecumenical Officer International Council of Community Churches
Mitch Hescox President Evangelical Environmental Network
Bishop Howard J. Hubbard Bishop of Albany and Chairman, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
Sister Mary Hughes, OP President Leadership Council of Women Religious
Joel Hunter Senior Pastor Northland: A Church Distributed
Michael Kinnamon General Secretary National Council of Churches of Christ
The Very Reverend Leonid Kiskovsky Director of External Affairs and Orthodox Church in America
Kate Kooyman Christian Reformed Church
Michael Livingston Director, Poverty Initiative National Council of Churches of Christ
Carlos Malave Associate for Ecumenical
Relationships
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
John McCullough Executive Director and CEO Church World Service
Wendy McFadden Executive Director and Church of the Brethren
A. Roy Medley General Secretary American Baptist Churches USA
Rich Nathan Senior Pastor Vineyard Columbus
Noffsinger General Secretary Church of the Brethren
Gradye Parsons Stated Clerk of the General Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Bishop Sharon Zimmerman Rader Ecumenical Officer, Council of United Methodist Church
Commissioner William A Roberts National Commander The Salvation Army
Samuel Rodriguez President National Hispanic Christian Leadership
Bishop Monroe Saunders Presiding Bishop United Church of Jesus Christ (Apostolic)
Ron Sider President Evangelicals for Social Action
Rev. Dr. Stephen Sidorak General Secretary, General United Methodist Church
Rev. Larry Snyder President Catholic Charities USA
Ervin R. Stutzman Executive Director Mennonite Church USA
Stephen J Thurston President National Baptist Convention of America
R. Lamar Vest President and CEO American Bible Society
Daniel Vestal Executive Coordinator Cooperative Baptist Fellowship
Berten A. Waggoner National Director Vineyard USA
Jim Wallis President and CEO Sojourners
Rev. Dr. Sharon Watkins General Minister and President Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
Rt. Rev. Elijah Williams General President The United Holy Church of America
Dr. Barbara Williams-Skinner
Co-facilitator National African American Clergy Network
Jim Winkler General Secretary, General Board
of Church and Society
United Methodist Church