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Archives:  February 2007

This page lists all reports and commentary from February, 2007

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.

2/23/07
US detention/torture system put on trial

Naomi Klein, writing for The Nation (March 12, 2007, issue) reports on the trial of José Padilla in Miami, where the cruel methods US interrogators have used since September 11 to "break" prisoners are finally being put on trial.

This was not supposed to happen. The Bush Administration's plan was to put Padilla on trial for allegedly being part of a network linked to international terrorists. But Padilla's lawyers are arguing that he is not fit to stand trial because he has been driven insane by the government.

Arrested in May 2002 at Chicago's O'Hare airport, Padilla, a Brooklyn-born former gang member, was classified as an "enemy combatant" and taken to a Navy prison in Charleston, South Carolina. He was kept in a 9-by-7-foot cell with no natural light, no clock and no calendar. Whenever Padilla left the cell, he was shackled and suited in heavy goggles and headphones. Padilla was kept under these conditions for 1,307 days. He was forbidden contact with anyone but his interrogators, who punctured the extreme sensory deprivation with sensory overload, blasting him with harsh lights and pounding sounds. Padilla also says he was injected with a "truth serum," a substance his lawyers believe was LSD or PCP.

According to his lawyers and two mental health specialists who examined him, Padilla has been so shattered that he lacks the ability to assist in his own defense. In order to prove that "the extended torture visited upon Mr. Padilla has left him damaged," his lawyers want to tell the court what happened during those years in the Navy brig. The prosecution strenuously objects, maintaining that "Padilla is competent," that his treatment is irrelevant.

US District Judge Marcia Cooke disagrees. She has ordered several prison employees to testify at the hearings on Padilla's mental state, which begin February 22. They will be asked how a man alleged to have engaged in elaborate antigovernment plots now acts, in the words of brig staff, "like a piece of furniture."

What is on trial in Florida is not one man's mental state. It is the whole system of US psychological torture.

The full article >>

GHOSTS OF ABU GHRAIB premiered last night on HBO

The National Religious Campaign Against Torture is publicizing a new documentary examining the abuses that occurred in the fall of 2003 at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. "Ghosts of Abu Ghraib" premiered on HBO on February 22. Click here for additional show times.

NRCAT is working with the film’s director, Rory Kennedy, and HBO about further plans for having wide viewing opportunities of this sobering documentary, and your feedback will help them in their planning. Please send your reactions to the film to them at campaign@nrcat.org
.

Through interviews with perpetrators, victims and witnesses, Ghosts of Abu Ghraib examines the abuses that occurred in the fall of 2003 at the notorious Iraqi prison.

bullet

View the trailer for “Ghosts of Abu Ghraib”

bullet

Rory Kennedy on the making of the documentary

bullet

From the National Religious Campaign Against Torture.

“Locking up family values”

This is the title of a study published today by Lutheran Immigrant and Refugee Services and the Women's Commission for Refugee Women and Children, about detention of immigrant families including three-year old children in prison-like conditions. 

A press release describes the report as follows:

Groundbreaking report finds significant problems with U.S. treatment of immigrant families in detention

Washington, DC, Feb. 22, 2007: Refugee advocates found prison-like conditions at the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) facilities that house immigrant families, including asylum seekers, who are in immigration proceedings. The Women’s Commission for Refugee Women and Children and Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service (LIRS) describe their findings in a report released today, Locking Up Family Values: The Detention of Immigrant Families, which also lays out steps that DHS can take immediately to ensure that families in U.S. detention are treated humanely.

This is a 72-page PDF document, so you may need a little time to download it if you don’t have a fast connection. Click here to get it >>

Thanks to Jonathan R. Nelson, on the Presbyterians for Just Immigration e-list.

Immigration is new rallying point for KKK

Bloomington, Indiana, has seen a local Ku Klux Klan group using anxieties about immigration and the economy to recruit new members.  This is apparently happening elsewhere around the country, as well.   The full report >>

Reflections from Mount Kilimanjaro ....the Roof of Africa

Michael Adee, National Field Organizer for More Light Presbyterians, has sent his thoughts on his recent trek to the mountaintop ... a journey to celebrate freedom, and the dignity of all God’s people that is his own deep commitment.  His essay >>

Presbytery and synod execs, facing difficult times, are encouraged to move from reactive space and to ask "adaptive" questions to solve problems

No quick-fix, technical outline for the future of Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) synods and presbyteries was arrived at during a recent two-day meeting in Albuquerque, but that was precisely as the meeting's facilitator intended.

Coming to these gatherings looking for a solution assumes there is a technical solution, but "deep change requires adaptive work," said the Rev. Gilbert Rendle. Instead, we need to sit together "and ask better questions."

The full report from Presbyterian News Service >> 

2/21/07
From the Presbyterian Witness in Washington Weekly:

The Federal Budget: a Human Needs Budget?
For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.
– Matthew 6:21

The Presbyterian Washington Office is posting very helpful analyses of the proposed federal Budget, from the perspective of our church's views on social needs and social justice.  These are being posted as part of the office's Witness in Washington Weekly, with the first section appearing in the February 12, 2007 letter, and the second in the February 19 letter. They are authored by Leslie G. Woods, staff person for Domestic Poverty and Environmental Issues. More articles will be posted in the near future.

The first section offers a general introduction to the budget process, and some of the major issues and concerns.  The second part deals more specifically with funding for hunger and nutrition programs, home energy assistance, and conservation.

We reprint them here with the kind permission of the Washington Office. If you find these analyses helpful, you can receive them yourself only by subscribing to the e-list for them, since they are not normally posted on the Washington Office web-site. Just go to http://capwiz.com/pcusa/mlm/signup . And we encourage you to do just that! 

More on flags in church:

Not long after 9/11 some people began a conversation about the appropriate display of US flags in church sanctuaries – or whether such displays are never appropriate.

Our page dedicated to that conversation continues to attract visitors, some of whom continue to offer comments. The latest comes from Tim Musser, of Cleveland, Ohio, who says, "Here is the best piece I’ve ever seen on the issue - and not just for Catholics but all Christians." He sends a link to an essay by the Rev. Emmanuel Charles McCarthy, with the interesting title, "Sacerdotal Flagism: Should the Flag Be Permanently Displayed in Church Sanctuaries Or Other Explicitly Christian Environments?"  [This four-page essay is in PDF format.]

He opens with Jesus’ words: "My house will be called a house of prayer for all peoples." (Mark 11:17) He builds his argument against the display of the American flag (or that of any other nation) on the Catholic Church’s traditional claim to be a truly universal church, which means it must never identify itself with any single nation.

He writes: "The flag is a sign of the temporal, the totally passing, the utterly perishable. The state is not an object of redemption in the New Testament. Its existence is as fleeting as a cloud, here today, extinct tomorrow." Good grief, is he talking about the US of A??

Two pastors named as GAC program directors

Leaders in Evangelism & Church Growth and Racial Ethnic & Women's Ministries to join staff in April

A report from Presbyterian News Service, dated February 20, 2007  [posted here 2-21-07]

The Rev. Eric Hoey, co-pastor at Alhambra True Light Presbyterian Church in San Gabriel Presbytery, has been named director of the Evangelism and Church Growth program area and the Rev. Rhashell D. Hunter, pastor of Community Presbyterian Church in Flint, MI in Lake Huron Presbytery, has been named director of the Racial Ethnic and Women's Ministries program area. Both will join the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) national staff here in April.    The full report >>

2/15/07
MRTI wants help pressuring Hilton Hotels to meet, talk

Hope is that global lodging giant will help fight child sex trafficking  

Presbyterian News Service reports that the Mission Responsibility Through Investment (MRTI) committee, which monitors PC(USA)-related investments to ensure they are socially responsible and consistent with General Assembly policies, is calling on agencies and partners of the denomination to join forces with the public to demand that Hilton Hotels Corp. take steps in combating child sex trafficking spurred by the tourism industry.

The committee also dealt with the Sudan/Darfur crisis.

The rest of the story >>

Somplatsy-Jarman offers a review of MRTI’s work in 2006|

During the Christmas season, the Rev. William Somplatsky-Jarman, who serves as the Associate for Mission Responsibility Through Investment in Louisville, sent a letter to friends and supporters of MRTI, reviewing their work through the past year, and encouraging people to give extra support for their vital and demanding work.   The full letter >>

"Formally engaged"

New Wineskins votes to move ahead with "marriage" to Evangelical Presbyterian Church

A report from Presbyterian News Service

After a yearlong courtship, a formal engagement between the New Wineskins Association of Churches (NWAC) and the Evangelical Presbyterian Church (EPC) was agreed to on Friday, Feb. 9.

The NWAC, a group of Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) congregations unhappy with the state of the denomination, voted unanimously on Feb. 9 to petition the EPC to create a non-geographic, transitional New Wineskins presbytery (NWEPC) for those churches wishing to leave the PC(USA).

The EPC will vote on the matter at its General Assembly (GA) in June. If approved, the NWEPC presbytery, transitional for a period of five years, could be set up immediately following the GA, said the Rev. Dean Weaver, co-moderator of the NWAC.

Highlights of the plan include:

bulletThe NWEPC will be self-governing under the NWAC Constitution and shall have the authority to ordain, install, receive and dismiss pastors.
bulletNWEPC pastors and staff shall be immediately eligible to participate in the pension and medical plans of the EPC.
bulletEach NWEPC church will own its own property and will elect and ordain elders and deacons from its own congregational members.
bulletThe NWEPC shall have the authority to plant churches.

Under PC(USA) law, a PC(USA) congregation must ask its presbytery to dismiss it in order to officially leave the denomination. A presbytery can only dismiss a congregation, either with or without the church property, to an ecclesiastical body "whose organization is conformed to the doctrines and order of this Church," according to a 1976 General Assembly Permanent Judicial Commission decision. The EPC falls within that rubric, said Office of the General Assembly officials.

It’s not clear exactly how many PC(USA) congregations might seek to leave the denomination and join the EPC via a newly created New Wineskins presbytery, but the New Wineskins say they have 151 endorsing churches overall.  Not all will opt to leave, particularly with weighty issues over whether they could take church property with them often hanging in the balance.

The complete story >>

A new response to "the immigration issue" --

Sanctuary
Widening the Circle of Hospitality

Hospitality – the offering of rest and shelter to those who lie outside the circle of kinship – is a core value of every faith tradition. It could even be said that it represents the core of our humanity as well, since hospitality effectively transforms the "other" into family.

Sanctuary is perhaps the most significant form of hospitality – a welcoming of the rejected – people whose very humanity has been called into question. Sanctuary is the response of faith communities nationwide to the recent immigration raids that have resulted in the deportation of parents whose citizen children often find themselves on their own or sent to live with strangers.

The New Sanctuary Movement is nothing more and nothing less than people of faith coming together to say, "No more!" and to offer a safe space to families who are being torn apart in the name of an immigration law that everyone acknowledges is broken. For more information on the issue and how you can get involved, read on ... >>

No2Torture gathering in Los Angeles draws 70

Carol Wickersham reports on the January 19-20 meeting, which was co-sponsored by the National Religious Coalition Against Torture (NRCAT).

Speakers included keynoter Dr. Richard Mouw, President of Fuller Theological Seminary, who provided a grounding in the Calvinist understanding of the universal and human temptation to sin, as well our source of redemption in our sovereign God. Dr. George Hunsinger of Princeton Theological Seminary provided insights into "Torture as the Ticking Time Bomb," unpacking how torture fuels terrorism, and how legitimizing torture undermines the constitutional democracy which we claim as "our way of life."

The full report >>

The Washington Report to Presbyterians presents the outlook for 2007   

The bimonthly Washington Report to Presbyterians, prepared by the PC(USA) Washington Office, presents the "outlook for 2007," with three sections, dealing with:

bullet Race, gender and religious liberties
bullet Domestic poverty, ecology and environment
bullet International issues and peace

Save the Date!

Interfaith Worker Justice – 2007 National Conference

Come Walk With Us: Welcoming, Struggling and Organizing for Worker Justice
Saturday, June 16 – Tuesday, June 19 in Chicago

Cost, registration, and lodging information will be available on-line at www.iwj.org by late February, 2007.

2/13/07

A WEEK FOR PEACE, GLOBAL JUSTICE AND CREATION

July 30 - August 5, 2007
Ghost Ranch, Abiquiu, New Mexico

This summer the Witherspoon Society is joining with the Presbyterian Peace Fellowship, Presbyterians for Restoring Creation and the Presbyterian Peacemaking Program, along with Ghost Ranch, to provide Presbyterians with a rich selection of leaders and topics centering on just what the title says:  peace, global justice, and the creation.    More >>

A major Christian Peace Witness for Iraq will be held in Washington on March 16-17

The Presbyterian Peace Fellowship will be there, and Marilyn White of PPF has sent this message in preparation for the event:

To: Presbyterian peacemakers and friends

Some of you have been asking about the Christian Peace Witness in Washington, March 16, and Presbyterian Peace Fellowship involvement.

Yes, we'll be there and Rick Ufford-Chase is organizing some exciting high-profile Presbyterian involvement in the National Cathedral service, civil disobedience action, and more.

For those of you who have been considering civil disobedience (holy obedience) this will be a prayerful, faith-based action with HUGE numbers. For every person risking arrest, support people are needed to hold the cell phones, communicate with families and press, etc. So everyone is needed and welcome.

You'll find more information on the Peace Fellowship website.  And from there, go to the Christian Peace Witness web site where you need to register, because space is limited at the national cathedral.

If you are coming, send a note to our volunteer organizers, Maren and Andrea, at ppfcpw@gmail.com  Let them know if you can provide housing or transportation, or if you have a room and need a roommate. Let them know if you have found a good place to stay that others could take advantage of. Let them know if you are looking for floor space in a church or other really basic accommodations. Let them know if you will be attending our lunch and gathering on Saturday, March 17 at New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, 1313 New York Avenue, 11:00 a.m. - 4 p.m.

Are you going to Ecumenical Advocacy Days the previous weekend? If you are staying on for the CPW the following weekend, you might want to attend the Ecumenical Advocacy Conference on the Philippines, March 12-14. We are thinking of expanding our accompaniment work to the Philippines and our church partners will be explaining their dire human situation at this conference. There is a link from the Ecumenical Advocacy Days web site with more information.

If you are just coming for the CPW, when should you arrive?

If you are going to participate in the CD action, a required orientation meeting will be held at 4:30 p.m. on Friday. Other meetings and workshops begin as early as Thursday evening. If you are flying into Baltimore, allow at least 2 hours to get into Washington. It should take less time from the other airports.

Don't rush home -

On Saturday afternoon, we will have a great gathering of Presbyterians, led by the Presbyterian Peacemaking program, the Washington office and others.

Following that meeting, plan on dinner in a restaurant with a large or small group.

On Sunday morning, plan on worship at New York Avenue Church, with Rick Ufford-Chase preaching.

I can't seem to find a reasonable airfare home on Sunday afternoon, so I'm staying until Monday. We'll plan some more activities for anyone who wants to stick around. Send me your ideas.

About housing:

I hope to have some hotel suggestions by Tuesday. I'll send another note at that time. After that, all communications will be from the ppfcpw address, so contact them if you want to stay in the loop.

Comments and suggestions are welcome -- see you in Washington.

Peace, Marilyn

Ecumenical workshop planned on developing welcoming ministry for LGBT persons/families

[Announcement from More Light Presbyterians]

Ready to revitalize, deepen or begin a welcoming and affirming ministry or group in your local church, college, seminary campus or community?

If so -- MLP is co-sponsoring a faith-based community organizing workshop next month - March 15 - 18 in Chicago with you and your church or group in mind.    More >>

40 Years in the Wilderness: 40 Years of Occupation
Sabeel International Young Adult Conference
July 19- July 29, 2007

bulletDo you want to know more about Current Realities in Palestine, during this 40th year of the Occupation?
bulletDo you want to visit Biblical Sites and share Biblical reflection with Young Adults from around the world?
bulletAre you between the ages of 18 and 35 and want to be involved in advocacy for peace with justice in the Holy Land?

If you answered "yes" to these questions, then we invite you to participate in Sabeel’s 2nd International Young Adult Conference.

Our vision for this conference is to gather, network, and further educate young leaders from Palestine and around the world, during this

40th year of the Occupation; so that they may be trained, commissioned, and equipped with the tools to act in advocacy to end the Occupation.

The conference will include:

bulletVisits to Palestinian Towns and Villages
bulletEvents Celebrating Palestinian Culture Worship
bulletand Biblical Reflections
bulletVolunteer Experience
bulletAdvocacy Workshops
bulletSharing Experiences and Ideas with Palestinian Young Adults

The registration and program fee for the conference is $700.

This includes all of your land costs – food, accommodations, ground transportation, speakers and activities – but it does not include airfare. When scheduling flights, please keep in mind that participants should arrive on July 18th.

SPECIAL OFFER- For those interested in traveling in the Galilee there will be an option for a two-night tour for an additional $150 after the conference.

REGISTER BY JUNE 15th AT WWW.SABEEL.ORG or e-mail youth@sabeel.org for more information

ABOUT SABEEL: Sabeel is an ecumenical grassroots liberation theology movement among Palestinian Christians. Inspired by the life and teaching of Jesus Christ, this liberation theology seeks to deepen the faith of Palestinian Christians, promote unity, justice and love. Sabeel also works to promote a more accurate international awareness regarding the identity, presence, and witness of Palestinian Christians as well as their contemporary concerns. It encourages individuals and groups worldwide to work for a just, comprehensive, and enduring peace informed by truth and empowered by prayer and action.

Sabeel Ecumenical Liberation Theology Center
P.O.B. 49084
Jerusalem 91491
Tel: 972.2.532.7136
Fax: 972.2.532.7137
www.sabeel.org

Festival of Homiletics, May 21-25 in Nashville, will focus on prophetic preaching

The Festival of Homiletics is going to be held in Nashville May 21-25 this spring. For a mere $260 you can hear a lineup that includes

bulletWalter Brueggemann
bulletBarbara Brown Taylor
bulletFred Craddock
bulletTom Long
bulletAnna Carter Florence
bulletBrian McLaren
bulletWill Willimon
bulletGordon Lathrop
bulletJim Wallis
bulletJim Forbes
bulletCynthia Rigby
bulletWill Campbell ... and others.

 To get details and to register >>

British Jews break away from 'pro-Israeli' Board of Deputies

A new organization of British Jews has been launched recently in response to a perceived pro-Israeli bias in existing Jewish bodies in the UK.

The founders of Independent Jewish Voices, IJV, which will include such luminaries as the Nobel Prize-winning playwright Harold Pinter and the historian Eric Hobsbawm, say that the group is being established as a counter-balance to the uncritical support for Israeli policies offered by established bodies such as the Board of Deputies of British Jews.    The full story >>

2/9/07
Catching up on anti-Semitism – and now it’s the "new" anti-Semitism

You probably recall the furious criticisms on the Presbyterian Church (USA) after the 2004 General Assembly approved a call for studying the possibility of the church’s divesting itself of stocks in companies currently doing business in or with the State of Israel in ways that support the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian Territory. We reported and commented on those attacks at the time, and have continued to link to many discussions of Israel, Palestine, and charges of anti-Semitism.

But now a number of Jewish groups in the US are talking about a "new anti-Semitism," which some observers see as the familiar fear-mongering that has been practiced so effectively by President Bush and his administration, using "terrorists" (and of course Arabs and/or Muslims) as the focus of the fear.

The fierce criticisms of Jimmy Carter’s recent book, Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid, seem to be one current example of what these members of the "Israel lobby" are calling the new anti-Semitism.

To gain some understanding of what’s happening among our Jewish sisters and brothers, Geoff Browning, an active participant in the Israel-Palestine Network, attended a conference on "the new anti-Semitism" in the Bay Area, and shared a report with the group.

He has kindly agreed to let us share it here, as well. Browning’s essay >>

Wal-Mart joins union in calling for universal health care coverage for all Americans by 2012.

Wal-Mart Watch, which is sponsored by Wal-Mart labor unions, links to a variety of reports on this hopeful development.

A quick sample:

Wal-Mart, Union Join Forces on Health Care     [Washington Post]
At a news conference on Capitol Hill, Wal-Mart chief executive H. Lee Scott sat at one end of a table and vowed to put aside differences to "drive this debate forward." On the other end was Andy Stern, president of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and frequent Wal-Mart critic, declaring he had made a "tough choice" in the goal to improve coverage.

Wal-Mart, union push universal health care
      [CNNMoney.com]
In a partnership of unlikely allies, Wal-Mart's CEO, other corporate leaders and the head of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) called Wednesday for universal health care coverage for all Americans by 2012.

Wal-Mart Joins Health-Care Call
             [Wall Street Journal]
The campaign -- which is also supported by AT&T Inc., Intel Corp., staffing firm Kelly Services Inc., the Communications Workers of America and three public-policy groups -- comes amid a surge of interest in how to extend health insurance to the 46 million Americans without it.

Healthcare reform calls get louder      [Los Angeles Times]
The proposal was short of specifics but had four broad themes: universal health coverage by 2012, better preventive care and disease management; more efficient healthcare delivery, and cost-sharing by workers, employers and governments.

Labor notes:

Interfaith Worker Justice 2007 National Conference

Sunday, June 17 - Tuesday, June 19
Chicago, IL

This event is planned for "clergy, labor activists, seminarians and faculty."

Cost, registration and lodging information will be available on-line at www.iwj.org by late February 2007.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

New film visits Chinese sweatshops

The Feb. 12, 2007 issue of The Nation has a review by Stuart Klawans of a film, "China Blue," based on a visit to a Chinese sweatshop where garments are sewn for high-class American labels. It shows the reality of sweatshop life, and also gives the perspective of the factory owner, who feels that he is constantly being squeezed by the garment retailers.

Note:  This article is posted on The Nation's website, but may be available only to subscribers.

Faith and Eco-Justice Fellowship

NCC offers training and support for faith-based eco-justice work

Award also offered for eco-justice sermondeadline is March 1

The National Council of Churches seeks to transform the faith-based eco-justice movement by training and supporting emerging practitioners engaged in faith-based environmental work. We will nurture and train this new generation of leadership and aim for diversity and collaboration. The next fellowship class will begin in the summer of 2007.

2/5/07
Solution elusive as churches weary of gay clergy debate
Many members say they would like to move on to religious mission 

An article in this morning's Atlanta Journal-Constitution opens with the headlines above.  The reporter's basic point is that church members (Presbyterians, along with Lutherans, Episcopalians and others, on both sides of the debates about ordination and same-sex marriage) are increasingly anxious to get on with what they see as the church's primary mission.  As one Presbyterian elder says, that means "helping the poor, the homeless, the community at large."       Read the article on-line >>

Michael J. Adee, National Field Organizer for More Light Presbyterians, has written a thoughtful essay exploring the implications of the article for people who are committed to working for the full inclusion of lgbt Presbyterians in the life and ministries of the PC(USA).  His essay>>

Covenant Network offers resources as controversies multiply on matters of justice in ordination, equality in marriage, and more

The Covenant Network has sent out this note about the resources:

The 217th General Assembly, in adopting the recommendations of the Theological Task Force on the Peace, Unity, and Purity of the Church, offered the PCUSA an invitation to step back from controversy and concentrate on living together as brothers and sisters whose love of one another in Jesus Christ supersedes our differences.

Sadly, some Presbyterians seem either addicted to conflict, or unwilling to tolerate views that differ from their own. In some presbyteries, peace, unity and purity have been elusive; and yet, across the denomination Presbyterians still seek to live out their faith and live into the opportunities and responsibilities highlighted by the GA’s action.

The Covenant Network of Presbyterians has been developing resources to help. I hope you have already discovered Guidelines for Examination of Church Officers (2006),which you can access by

bullet downloading the file from the CovNet website >>
bulletrequesting an e-mail attachment from Tricia Dykers-Koenig >>
bullet ordering one or more hard copies from the CovNet online store >>

The Guidelines are meant to be shared widely, and we hope that you will study and use this resource in your session and presbytery. Also available from the online store is a CD, Legal Resources in the Presbyterian Church (USA), which contains pertinent GA PJC cases and other documents (including the Guidelines) that will be helpful to those dealing with the intricacies of ordination, same-sex unions, church property and other controversial issues.

Young adults sought for volunteer service both internationally and in the US

Doug Baker, who is the PC(USA)’s Regional Liaison for Ireland and UK, has sent this reminder and invitation:

One of the most exciting opportunities the Presbyterian Church USA has for individuals and congregations to become directly involved in mission is the Young Adult Volunteer Program. There are nine international sites (including Northern Ireland) and about an equal number of sites within the US where young adults ages 20-30 can spend 11 months in service and learning. At each site there are at least three YAVS so that they can also form an intentional community for their year, and engage in discipleship training and reflection with a Site Coordinator, who in most cases has been a long-term mission person in that setting. (I am the Site Coordinator for the Northern Ireland program.)

Sadly, most years we have more positions to fill than applicants! Those of us associated with this particular form of mission service, whether in the Louisville offices or on location at each of the sites, can 't believe that there aren't more candidates out there – if they simply knew about this possibility. That is where you come into the picture. Please think seriously about ways to make individuals you know, who might be interested in serving as part of this program, aware of it. I am attaching a description of the Northern Ireland program - not to push candidates toward this one site, but as one example of what is possible. I would encourage you to look yourself at the information on the two PCUSA websites that relate to this program worldwide and then encourage possible candidates to do the same.

Applications need to be submitted by the end of February in most cases, for a selection process which includes phone interviews before a residential placement event in Louisville in mid-April.

There are two PCUSA websites that have information on the YAV program: Go to www.pcusa.org/msr/youngadult.htm or http://onedoor.pcusa.org, then select "search." Enter a region (or select "any region" depending on how much you care to search), select "full-time," and then "young adult opportunities." Just for the sake of seeing the listings, check "member of a PCUSA congregation."

TO FIND OUT ABOUT BECOMING A YOUNG ADULT VOLUNTEER: you may also contact PCUSA Mission Service Recruitment at 888-728-7228 ext 2530.

A Final place to get great information on this program is by going to http://www.pcusa.org/missionconnections/yav.htm and reading some of the letters written by Young Adult Volunteers currently serving in different sites.

Thank you for taking time to explore this program and making others aware of it.

Grace and Peace,

Doug Baker
Regional Liaison for Ireland and UK
doug.baker@dnet.co.uk 

A little Witherspoon note:  A number of recently returned Young Adult Volunteers played very active roles in Witherspoon's "Dancing with God" conference on world mission in September, 2005.  Their contributions to our conversations gave evidence of the wide variety of experiences they had enjoyed, and the deep learning they had done.  We recommend this program with real enthusiasm!

2/3/07
A further report on the trial of the "SOA 17"

Even the judge acknowledges the complexity of the situation

We've received a new report on the trial of the 17 persons arrested last November at Ft. Benning, GA, for crossing the fence into the fort to protest the continuing activities of the School of the Americas.  This report comes from Robert Leslie, of Decatur, GA, who participated in the protest action last November without "crossing the line." 

NOTE:  We've just added the statement given to the Court by Philip Gates, one of the Presbyterians convicted.

Arizona congregation adopts statement of conscience, rejecting US use of torture

The congregation of Southside Presbyterian Church, in Tucson, Arizona, has adopted a statement of conscience, saying that "Our conscience demands that we reject [the Military Commissions Act of 2006] as contrary to our faith manifested in the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. We vow to speak against this law and to take action against it until it is repealed. We invite people of all faiths to join with us in resisting this Act, and in encouraging all people to work together to bring about the repeal of this Act and the rejection of torture by our government."   The full statement >>

PC(USA) leadership writes to congregations about apparent intent of some congregations to leave the denomination  

Clifton Kirkpatrick, the Stated Clerk of the General Assembly, and Linda Bryant Valentine, Executive Director, General Assembly Council, have sent a joint letter to all PC(USA) congregations, declaring their regret at the apparent intent of a few congregations to withdraw from the denomination, and affirming that "we are better together than we are apart."

Their cover letter to pastors >>
Their letter to all congregations >>

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.

Visit our lively
new website!

GA actions ratified (or not) by  the presbyteries   

A number of the most important actions of the 219th General Assembly have now been acted upon by the presbyteries, confirming most of them as amendments to the PC(USA) Book of Order.

We provided resources to help inform the reflection and debate, along with updates on the voting.

Our three areas of primary interest have been:

bullet Amendment 10-A, which  removes the current ban on lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender persons being considered as possible candidates for ordination as elder or ministers.  Approved!

bullet Amendment 10-2, which would add the Belhar Confession to our Book of Confessions.  Disapproved, because as an amendment to the Book of Confessions it needed a 2/3 vote, and did not receive that.

bullet Amendment 10-1, which  adopts the new Form of Government that was approved by the Assembly.   Approved.
 

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Some blogs worth visiting

PVJ's Facebook page

Mitch Trigger, PVJ's Secretary/Communicator, has created a Facebook page where Witherspoon members and others can gather to exchange news and views. Mitch and a few others have posted bits of news, both personal and organizational. But there’s room for more!

You can post your own news and views, or initiate a conversation about a topic of interest to you.

 

Voices of Sophia blog

Heather Reichgott, who has created this new blog for Voices of Sophia, introduces it:

After fifteen years of scholarship and activism, Voices of Sophia presents a blog. Here, we present the voices of feminist theologians of all stripes: scholars, clergy, students, exiles, missionaries, workers, thinkers, artists, lovers and devotees, from many parts of the world, all children of the God in whose image women are made. .... This blog seeks to glorify God through prayer, work, art, and intellectual reflection. Through articles and ensuing discussion we hope to become an active and thoughtful community.

 

John Harris’ Summit to Shore blogspot

Theological and philosophical reflections on everything between summit to shore, including kayaking, climbing, religion, spirituality, philosophy, theology, politics, culture, travel, The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), New York City and the Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood by a progressive New York City Presbyterian Pastor. John is a former member of the Witherspoon board, and is designated pastor of North Presbyterian Church in Flushing, NY.

 

John Shuck’s Shuck and Jive

A Presbyterian minister, currently serving as pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Elizabethton, Tenn., blogs about spirituality, culture, religion (both organized and disorganized), life, evolution, literature, Jesus, and lightening up.

 

Got more blogs to recommend?

Please send a note, and we'll see what we can do!

 

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