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Gun control
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The gun lobby’s loss may free legislators
[12-4-08]In an editorial
on December 2, 2008, the New York Times declared:
The gun lobby has long intimidated politicians
with its war chest and its trumpeted ability to deliver
single-issue voters, especially in tight races. After this
year’s election, those politicians should be far less afraid and
far more willing to vote for sensible gun-control laws.
The full editorial >> |
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Freedom under fire
Gun violence jeopardizes American
way of life in costly ways, speaker says at Stony Point conference
[9-23-08]
Presbyterian News
Service has reported on a conference held Sept. 15-17, 2008, at the
Stony Point Center in upstate New York, on the subject of “Gun
Violence and Gospel Values.”
The report begins:
Gun violence
threatens the nature of society, costing us in ways that is
difficult to quantify but affects us all deeply, a leading
expert told about 40 Presbyterians gathered here for a
conference on the topic Sept. 15-17.
“There are real
dollar costs in hardening our society [against gun violence], in
making airports secure, in making schools secure,” said Dr.
Garen J. Wintemute, a professor of emergency medicine and
director of the Violence Prevention Research Program at the
University of California, Davis, School of Medicine in
Sacramento, CA.
“But the larger
costs I think are intangible, they’re indirect. Gun violence
threatens the nature of our society as a free and open society,”
Wintemute continued. “It scares us. We live our lives to a
greater or lesser extent with fear because of gun violence.”
The full report >> |
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Looking toward
General Assembly 2008
National Capital Presbytery calls church to repent of our silence on
gun violence
by Jim Atwood
[5-24-08]
Just recently we learned of another milestone in
the War in Iraq. No one knows how many Iraqis have been killed
in that conflict, but we do know that 4,000 American service men
and women lost their lives in the five years that this war has
been waged. Each of their deaths is a tragedy.
But to put those tragic deaths in perspective, we
lose 4,000 persons to gun violence in the United States every
fifty days, and it continues over and over and over again.
Eighty people every day are killed; nine of them are children or
youth. These deaths are homicides, suicides and accidental
shootings. That’s where we are domestically.
Recently the US supplanted France and Russia as
the leading exporter of small arms to the developing nations of
the world. One thousand persons die every day with these weapons
which are sold to any nation that would side with us in our War
on Terror, in spite of State Department warnings that many of
these countries have abominable records on human rights. That,
in short, is where we are internationally.
This reality, especially the domestic carnage is
not something other nations face. They, in fact, are baffled as
to why we permit it, especially when the vast majority of
Americans support strict gun control measures. Gun violence is a
unique national problem that needs to be addressed by Christians
whom Jesus called peacemakers. It is impossible for me to
believe that Almighty God wills the deaths of 30,000 people
every year through gun violence in our country. God is concerned
that America has lost more people to gun violence since 1963
than have been killed in all the wars of the 20th century.
The resolution on gun violence sent by National
Capital Presbytery to the General Assembly calls on the Church
of Jesus Christ to repent of the fact that we are as quiet about
gun violence as the proverbial church mouse. But repentance in
New Testament terms never means hanging our heads in despair but
lifting up our heads in faith and trust in God and breaking our
silence as we begin to talk about the problem; to talk with one
another, to discuss, to argue, to dialogue, to come to some
measure of discernment as to what God would have us do in this
world so that God’s reign on earth would be as visible as God’s
reign in heaven.
A faithful Church needs to hear about gun
violence from the pulpit, from the Sunday School Class, from
women’s circles and men’s groups. We need to talk about the
problem. Some people, particularly those who believe that guns
save lives will be angry that the discussion is taking place at
all and will say this is not an appropriate subject to discuss
in church. They will want the preacher to pray about it, because
that’s what the church does, right? Well, partly. But prayer is
not enough; we must talk and we must act, but first we must
actually talk about it. Certainly the numerous Presbyterians who
hold advanced degrees, can develop ways to have responsible
civil discussions within our church families on this issue.
Then again, this resolution encourages the church
to take some concrete action. One measure to renounce the
violence that is taking over our cities and towns is for Pastors
and Sessions to organize a group of members and or friends and
go to places in your neighborhood where there have been
shootings or killings and have a brief time of worship. In those
few moments the church can tell the world that we deplore gun
violence and there is a better way to solve anger and injustice
than killing our neighbors who are also God’s children.
I trust that you will see the merit of this
resolution and will encourage your presbytery’s commissioners to
vote for it at GA.
Read the
full text of the Resolution >>
The author:
Jim Atwood is a retired Presbyterian Minister who
has served churches in North Carolina, and Virginia and as a
missionary in Japan where he was the Co- Director of the Student
Christian Fellowship in Tokyo. He has been fighting gun violence
since 1975 when one of his members at Grace Church in
Springfield, Virginia, was brutally killed by a teenager who was
out of money and picked up a gun from a buddy at the local
bowling alley. He has represented the PCUSA on the Board of the
Coalition to Stop Gun Violence and served two terms as its
Chair. He was also The Interfaith Chair of the Million Mom
March.
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Gun Violence and Gospel Values
Stony Point Center
September 15 - 17
[4-10-08]
Sponsored by Stony Point, the Presbyterian Peace
Fellowship, the Presbyterian Peacemaking Program, and the Advisory
Committee on Social Witness Policy, this colloquium will explore
ways in which the church must respond to growing gun violence in
communities across the United States. Save the dates;
stay tuned for more information!
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Join a
Lie-in against guns -- April 16
[4-3-08]
Join or start a
National Lie-in on April 16 with concerned citizens who believe
it is too easy to purchase guns in America. This initiative was
started by 32 women in Alexandria, Virginia who held a civil
protest to express outrage over the shootings that took place at
Virginia Tech. The group is not against hunters, guns for
private Protection or collectors of guns. They support
background checks for gun purchases and keeping guns out of the
hands of criminals.
More >> |
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Gun Crazy – but it's time to seek a little sanity
[3-4-08] The New York Times, in
an editorial on March 1, urged that US political leaders (and
specifically, those campaigning for the presidency) be called to
account for the lack of meaningful legislative action to rein in
the out-of-control availability of guns in this country.
Helpful measures might include requiring
background checks for every gun purchase, limiting each
individual to a maximum of one gun purchase per month (to limit
trafficking), and reviving the ban on the sale of assault
weapons.
The full editorial >> |
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Where's the debate over gun control?
[2-25-08] Liliana Segura, an AlterNet
staff writer and Editor of the Rights & Liberties section,
posted this reflection on Feb. 22:
The campus shooting at Northern Illinois
University may be old news by now, but forgive me for thinking
it might have presented an opportunity at last night's debate
for someone to ask Hillary or Obama about gun control. Can you
remember the last time either candidate talked about it? The
last time any Democratic presidential contender did? Thinking "Dems"
and "guns" leaves me with images of John Kerry in a hunting
outfit. Embarrassing.
The rest
of her essay >> |
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When
“‘prayers’ just won’t do” On the recent spate of
school killings and challenge of the gun lobby
[2-21-08]
Tim Rutten, writing in the Los Angeles
Times recently, lamented the numerous shootings recently in
schools around the nation.
All these wrenchingly tragic crimes are
linked by a common factor – the ubiquity of guns in America.
Given that we're in the midst of the most hotly contested
presidential campaign in recent memory, you'd think that all
this bloodletting might become a campaign issue. If you
thought that, you'd have reckoned without regard to the gun
lobby's near-total victory among the politicians of both
political parties. ...
The truth is that guns make the malicious,
the malcontent and the mad powerful. They confer the power
of life and death on the demented and deranged – and yet we
do nothing. There are more guns circulating in the U.S.
today than ever before, somewhere around 250 million,
according to projections by the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms.
Rutten’s article >>
Your WebWeaver found this article instructive,
but checked it out with Catherine Snyder, who has just joined
the Board of the Witherspoon Society. She serves as a campus
minister at Virginia Tech, where 32 students were gunned down
last April. She wrote this response:
Dear Doug,
Thank you for calling Tim Rutten's piece
"'Prayers' just won't do" to my attention. I hope you will
share it with as many people as you can. As a minister, I
confess my sadness that the most faithful and courageous
responses I have seen since April 16 have come from the
secular press. Churches seem to be as afraid as our
politicians when it comes to expressing outrage over these
preventable tragedies. It is shameful how we tolerate this
violence and do so little to change the laws that would make
such a difference in this country. We are not powerless,
though we act so.
Grace and peace,
Catherine
She suggested these articles, too:
It begins: “A sound and bipartisan public
lands bill is being held up in the Senate in behalf of the
gun lobby’s attempt to overturn decades-old safety
regulations barring people from carrying loaded guns in
national parks.”
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Can gun control get a hearing now?
[4-27-07] The killings at Virginia Tech have raised
the question of limiting access to firearms with new urgency – and
poignancy.
Christians and gun control: An idea whose time has
come?
Dr. Ben Witherington, professor of New Testament at
conservative Asbury Theological Seminary, takes on the question. He writes:
Where is the moral outrage about the ability of even
mentally whacked out people to buy guns in this country? You heard none of
the potential Presidential candidates saying anything about the need for
tighter gun control laws last week. ... It is interesting to me that even
most American Christians, when they discuss these things, discuss them in
terms of their Constitutional rights to bear firearms. They don’t ask
whether the New Testament might have anything to say about Christian
conduct in this regard. ... [Are there] ethical teachings in the New
Testament that have a bearing as to whether Christians, as private
citizens, should be bearing arms? Well yes, in fact there are texts to
consider. ...
The rest of his blog, and many interesting responses >.
.... and from The Thoughtful Christian ...
The excellent PC(USA) adult study resource series, The Thoughtful Christian,
includes on booklet entitled Gun Control: Is There a Christian Response?
It’s a 1-session study and is
available online >>
Have you seen other good resources for
this discussion,
or can you contribute some thoughts or questions of your own?
Just send a note,
to be shared here. |
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300 national, state, and local groups call for swift passage of S. 767,
The Gun Show Background Check of 2001
from the Presbyterian Washington Office
[posted here on 2-6-02]
January 29, 2002
Senator's Name
Office Number and Building
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Senator [Last Name]:
The undersigned organizations, representing a broad
array of law enforcement, gun violence prevention, public health,
consumer, faith-based, domestic violence, education, child advocacy,
civil rights, and victim's rights organizations, are writing in strong
support of S. 767, the Gun Show Background Check Act of 2001.
We support this bipartisan legislation to ensure that
all firearm sales at gun shows are treated equally. Introduced by
Senator Jack Reed and co-sponsored by 22 Senators, S. 767 simply extends
the Brady law to all firearms sales at gun shows to help prevent
juveniles, criminals, domestic violence offenders, and other prohibited
purchasers from buying firearms. This bill is identical to the
Lautenberg amendment, which passed the Senate in 1999 in the wake of the
tragedy at Columbine.
Please help close this dangerous loophole and make
certain that law enforcement has the time and tools necessary to keep
guns out of the hands of criminals and away from children. Listed below
are the national organizations and some of the local groups in [State],
including [List all state orgs in BOLD], calling for passage of S. 767.
We ask that you support Senator Reed's bill and urge the Senate
leadership to bring S. 767 to a vote.
Thank you for your attention to this important issue.
Sincerely,
National Organizations
American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
American Academy of Pediatrics
American Association of Suicidology
American College of Nurse-Midwives
American College of Preventive Medicine
American Counseling Association
American Ethical Union
American Federation of Teachers
American Medical Association
American Medical Students Association
American Medical Women's Association
American Psychiatric Association
American Public Health Association Association of
Clinicians for the Underserved
Association of Women's Health, Obstetric and Neonatal
Nurses
Brady Campaign and Brady Center to Prevent Gun
Violence
Center for Youth as Resources
Central Conference of American Rabbis
Child Welfare League of America
Children's Defense Fund
Church of the Brethren
Coalition to Stop Gun Violence
Consumer Federation of America
Doctors Against Handgun Injury
Family Violence Prevention Fund
Friends Committee on National Legislation (Quaker)
Hadassah, the Women's Zionist Organization of America
Hispanic American Police Command Officers Association
Jewish Council for Public Affairs
Jewish Women International
Joint Action Committee (JAC)
Justice Policy Institute
Lutheran Office for Governmental Affairs, ELCA
Major Cities Chiefs Association
Mennonite Central Committee US, Washington Office
Million Mom March
Mothers Against Violence in America
National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP)
National Association of County and City Health
Officials
National Association of Pediatric Nurse Practitioners
National Association of School Psychologists
National Association of School Resource Officers
National Black Police Association
National Coalition Against Domestic Violence
National Consortium for African American Children
National Council of Jewish Women, Inc.
National Education Association
National Medical Association
National Network for Youth
National Network to End Domestic Violence
National Partnership for Women & Families
National Troopers Coalition
National Women's Health Network
National Women's Law Center
Physicians for Social Responsibility
Physicians for a Violence-Free Society
Police Foundation
Presbyterian Washington Office, PC (USA)
School Social Work Association of America
Society for Adolescent Medicine
Society for Public Health Education
The Consumer Alliance
Trauma Foundation
Union of American Hebrew Congregations
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations
United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness
Ministries
Violence Policy Center
Women of Reform Judaism
YWCA of the U.S.A.
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Some blogs worth
visiting |
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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.
Witherspoon’s Facebook page
Mitch Trigger,
Witherspoon’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.
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 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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Plan now for ...
GHOST RANCH PEACE & JUSTICE
WEEK
July 27 - August 2, 2009
Now's the time to make reservations to be a part of
the 2009 Peace & Justice Week at Ghost Ranch, July 27-August 2.
There are eight seminars to choose among, including the
Witherspoon-sponsored class “New Eyes for Peace & Justice from the
World Church” led by Clifton Kirkpatrick.
More
information >> |
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we hope you'll help us keep this website going ... and growing!
Please consider making a special contribution --
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Click
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Or send your check, made out to
"Witherspoon Society" and marked "web site," to our Witherspoon
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Check out our report from the
Conference
on
Terror, Torture,
and Security |
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