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Friday, April 29, 2005

Life Together: Lamentations and Thanksgivings Uttered on April 24, 2005 in Louisville

Here are the lamentations and the corresponding thanksgivings that seemed appropriate to me on the occasion when religious life in Kentucky was in the national spotlight.

I lament today that our brothers and sisters in Christ at Highview Baptist Church believe those who do not agree with them are somehow anti-Christian, and I mourn that there are other Christians, probably among us here, who would characterize their attitudes and actions tonight as unChristian. I grieve that the Church is being further divided in our time. I am saddened deeply that I have brothers and sisters in Christ who believe that those who oppose a small number of President Bush's judicial nominees are conducting an "assault against people of faith."

Ecumenical accountability for mutual faithfulness requires us to remember the commandment that says: Thou shalt not bear false witness. In so far as I can determine, no one is waging a war against people of faith in these United States. No one is blocking these nominees because of their religion, or even because of their positions on abortion or the nature of marriage. I have spent hours this past week looking over the resumes of each of the candidates whose nominations are contested, and whose nominations may be subject to the Senate practice of filibuster. When I compare them with those who have been approved, I see nothing different about their religious affiliations and convictions that would constitute the charge of religious persecution and religious bigotry. I do see many reasons why Senators could object to appointing them to a lifetime on the bench. Therefore I grieve that my brothers and sisters in Christ are making these accusations and causing deeper divisions within the Christian family of churches.

On the other hand, I give thanks that this nation was founded on the principles of religious liberty, and that the Constitution of these United States permits both the people of Highview Baptist and those who will join them there, and those of us here, to exercise these liberties to bring our religious perspective to bear upon matters of public policy. It is our right and I believe, as Christians, our duty to apply our faith and moral convictions to the issues of our common life together. Contrary to what the two largest newspapers in our state have said, to engage in such application of religion to political issues is not a violation of IRS regulations. I believe that America will be a saner and healthier place because of what we do here today.

I lament, however, that people are using each other in ways that do not build up our common life: religion and religious people are being manipulated to achieve political ends; and politics are being manipulated and used to achieve ends that appear to tend more toward theocracy than democracy. Let it be noted that, in human history, wherever religion and political partners have joined hands to defeat some presumed "moral relativism" or cultural pluralism, such efforts have resulted only in fascism, and political disaster.

An independent judiciary has been essential for the checks and balances of the American system of government and law. Although any one of us may not like particular rulings by judges, it is contrary to the American way to try to force them to act in ways that they believe are not in accord with our Constitution. To accuse judges of being "constitutionally defiant", and to urge Congress to reduce or eliminate the funding of federal courts that overstep their constitutional authority" debases and destabilizes the integrity of our system of government, and those who serve.

I give thanks for our independent judiciary, and for the men and women who bring their scholarship, their compassion, and their sense of justice to bear on terribly difficult matters for the sake of all of us.

Finally, I lament that people are using words of Scripture and words from the founders of our nation, frequently out of context or worse, inaccurately, as bludgeons against others who also value Scripture and the heritage of our nation. When Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council declares that "for years activist courts....have been quietly working under the veil of the judiciary, like thieves in the night, to rob of us of our Christian heritage and our religious freedoms," I mourn for our country, that we have done such a terrible job of educating our citizens about the religious heritage of this nation, that such a vacuum of knowledge has developed that people misunderstand the philosophy and values on which this great nation has been able to grow and to address, however faltering, our own successes and failures to live into the high ideals and noble truths that are enshrined in our Constitution. Coercion will never yield anything other than rebellion and chaos. Christian reconstructionism, and the Declaration of Constitutional Restoration adopted at a conference April 4-5 in Washington, DC, are both efforts to remake this nation as a Christian theocracy.

On this matter, lamentation is not sufficient. People of faith, Christians, citizens-- all must stand up to defend the bill of rights and our Constitution. We do so thankfully, because this land of liberty and justice has been a place where religion has thrived, and has become the most religious nation in the history of the world.

With gratitude, then, for our liberties, for our freedom, we are empowered to deal creatively and positively with those things that grieve us and that frighten us, for the sake of the common good. Called to love our neighbor, let us do it. Called to love kindness, to do justice, and walk humbly with our God, let us no longer sit with our tongues tied but let us speak with care and respect to all our neighbors. Called to liberty, let us no longer submit to a yoke of slavery. We don't need "activist" judges, but judges who are wise, just, and committed to upholding our Constitution. Let us be citizen activists for the sake of freedom AND faith!

With hope for justice, peace, and unity, Nancy Jo

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

LIFE TOGETHER: Two Rallys on April 24 put national spotlight on Kentucky Churches

As some of the readers of this blog will know, I was a participant in the "Freedom and Faith" rally held Sunday afternoon, April 24, 2005, at Central Presbyterian Church in Louisville. This event served as an alternative rally to the so-called "Justice Sunday" event held at Highview Baptist Church and that was simulcast across the nation on Sunday evening.

The afternoon rally brought together those who felt quite strongly that language of "religious discrimination" in the case of some of President Bush's judicial nominees was inappropriate and also deeply offensive to other "people of faith". Other speakers at Central Presbyterian included: Rev. Al Pennybacker of the Clergy and Laity Network; the Honorable Jonathan Miller, Kentucky Treasurer; Jim Wallis, of Sojourners and author of God's Politics; Rev. Dr. Joe Phelps, pastor of Highlands Baptist Church; Rev. Lucinda Laird, Rector of St. Matthews Episcopal Church; Rev. Dr. Charles Gutenson, professor of theology and philosophy at Asbury Theological Seminary; Rev. Dr. William Kincaid, of the Interfaith Alliance of the Bluegrass, and Rev. Dr. Joan Brown Campbell, Director of the Department of Religion, Chautauqua Institution.

I was not there in the name of the Kentucky Council of Churches. I spoke in the cause of ecumenism: a movement within Christianity that understands us all to be part of God's one beloved family or household, and that seeks foremost the unity of churches who declare that their oneness in Jesus Christ. I felt it important to speak a different word that the words that I heard coming from those who promoted the event that featured Senator William Frist, Dr. Albert Mohler, Chuck Colson, Dr. James Dobson, and Tony Perkins.

Tony Perkins, executive director of the Family Research Council, has claimed that a "radical minority has launched an unprecedented filibuster" against a handful of judicial nominees. They have said that people who oppose these candidates are "hostile to faith."

I felt it was time to speak the truth in love to brothers and sisters in Christ who somehow feel, contrary to Scripture, that those who differ with them on a political matter are somehow "hostile to faith", and to witness to a different religious spirit, a spirit that animates and undergirds the foundations of a civil and just society.

Ecumenical manners, in my organization, require that we live out concretely, in word and deed, the irrevocable call to reconciliation and unity within Christianity, and in the world. Because I work for an organization committed to the cause of Christian unity, I cannot join in name calling, using derogatory adjectives or verbs against those with whom I disagree, however strongly. We must avoid polemics and caricatures of opposing points of view. This does not prevent us from speaking prophetically, but it does require that we do so honestly and fairly. It does not prevent us from being angry with one another. It DOES require that we frame our language and shape our arguments in ways that MODEL what we believe.

My efforts at the alternative rally were phrased in terms of lamentations and thanksgivings. I'll share those in another blog in the next day or so. Or, you can find a copy of my remarks on our web-site at www.kycouncilofchurches.org.

With hope for justice, peace, and unity, Nancy Jo

Intercom: A new way of talking about our life together

Greetings! Nancy Jo Kemper, here. I'm taking this opportunity to announce that the Kentucky Council of Churches has decided to start a "blog", that will be an occasional web publication. Due to financial difficulties, we are no longer able to publish our hard-copy newspaper, Intercom.

We want our former Intercom readers, however, to be informed about church life and to receive electronically news and editorials about our life together. As the executive director, I will be writing this blog on a weekly basis, as time allows. I hope that you will find it worth your time, and that you will pass the URL along to friends and colleagues.

You will be able to find my reflections on our life together in the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and in the United States, from the perspective of an ecumenist, and based on the policies of the Kentucky Council of Churches. Bringing a Christian and ecumenical perspective to bear on events and issues of our day will be the purpose of this blog. Other information about our life together in the churches of Kentucky will continue to be available on our web-site: http://www.kycouncilofchurches.org/.

You may subscribe to receive e-mail action alerts by way of our Cap-wiz site at:
http://capwiz.com/kychurches/mlm/signup/.

The blog, however, will primarily be my reflections on religion, politics, theology, and ecumenical life. I would welcome you as a reader of my blog, and hope that it will be helpful to you in your life as a faithful citizen.

In the cause of unity, peace and justice, Nancy Jo