|
Prominent Christians, Jews, Muslims unite
to protect funding for poverty assistance
Interfaith Coalition Warns
Administration, Congress that Houses of Worship
Will Be Unable to Make Up the Difference in Funding Cuts to Poverty Programs
Washington, July 14, 2011 – Representing a growing movement of Americans
concerned that the Administration and Congress are enacting a budget deal
that will place an undue burden on the poor “while shielding the wealthiest
from any additional sacrifice,” leaders representing the Christian, Jewish
and Muslim faiths today launched a new campaign to encourage policymakers to
maintain a robust U.S. commitment to domestic and international poverty
programs.
Inspired by a common conviction that God has called on all Americans to
protect the vulnerable and promote the dignity of all individuals living in
society, the interfaith coalition is aiming to protect those struggling to
overcome poverty in the U.S. and abroad and to exclude programs that protect
people in poverty from the budget deficit debates.
More
than 25 heads of communion and national religious organizations are
spearheading an 18-month faith-based public policy campaign to urge Congress
and the Administration to exempt programs that assist at-risk families and
children in the U.S. and abroad from budget cuts. The campaign will consist
of high-level meetings with policymakers, a Washington fly-in of religious
leaders and daily prayer vigils among other actions.
The daily prayer vigils are being held on the front lawn of the United
Methodist Building on Maryland Avenue near the U.S. Capitol Building. Led by
a different religious organization each day at 12:30 p.m. EDT, the prayer
vigils will continue throughout the White House led budget negotiations
.
To kick-off the campaign, the religious leaders sent urgent letters this
week to President Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), House Speaker John Boehner
(R-Ohio), and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) stating that
“People who are served by government program – those who are poor, sick, and
hungry, older adults, children, and people with disabilities – should not
bear the brunt of the budget-cutting burden.”
The religious leaders wrote, “We share our grave concern and dismay that the
ongoing conversations and negotiations regarding our nation’s budget may
yield an outcome that places individuals and families struggling with
poverty at risk of even further hardship while shielding the wealthiest in
our nation from any additional sacrifice.”
In addition, the leaders made it clear that religious groups would be unable
to make up the difference in funding if the government further cuts or
eliminates programs for society’s most vulnerable populations.
The interfaith leaders warned that without a sustained federal commitment to
federal- and state-run assistance programs, religious organizations and
Houses of Worship cannot be the sole support for the country’s most
vulnerable in their most pressing times of need.
In their letters to President Obama and Congress, the leaders explained that
“Houses of worship and communities of faith cannot meet the current need,
much less the increased hardship that would result from severe cuts in
federal, and consequently, state programs. We need the public-private
partnership that has for decades enabled us as a nation to respond to
desperate need, both human and environmental.”
The campaign was announced today via a teleconference featuring the Rev.
Canon Peg Chemberlin, President, National Council of Churches and Executive
Director, Minnesota Council of Churches; the Rev. Gradye Parsons, Stated
Clerk of the General Assembly, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) ; Rabbi Steve
Gutow, President, Jewish Council for Public Affairs; the Rev. John L.
McCullough, Executive Director and CEO, Church World Service; Sister Mary
Hughes, OP, President, Leadership Conference of Women Religious; Dr. Sayyid
M. Syeed, National Director, Office for Interfaith & Community Alliances,
Islamic Society of North America; and the Rev. J. Herbert Nelson, Director
of Public Witness, Presbyterian Church USA.
During the briefing, Dr. Syeed, spoke first about our responsibility to
stand up for those who cannot speak for themselves.
“It is our religious duty as part of the faith communities to convey our
concerns about the problems of the budget cuts that will directly impact low
income individuals and the dispossessed,” Syeed said. “We are asking for a
budget that should be just and equitable. It is our Islamic duty because
this is one of the pillars of Islam.”
NCC President Chemberlin said, “Extreme politicians are threatening to stop
Medicare and Social Security payments, stop paying our men and women
fighting overseas, plunge even more Americans into unemployment, and
completely abandon the poor, only so that they can maintain a few tax
loopholes for the richest Americans.”
Rabbi Gutow said, “To hurt the poor by trying to balance the budget or
lessen the debt is a little bit ridiculous.” He went on to say, “We were
known by our founders as a city on a hill with a light of justice that
emanated forth and we cannot and we must not be any less than who we are.”
The Rev. Gradye Parsons, the Stated Clerk of the General Assembly,
Presbyterian Church USA, warned that cuts to domestic and international
poverty programs would have a devastating impact not only on individuals and
families facing economic hardship, but houses of worship across the country
that have worked in conjunction with federal- and state-led economic
assistance programs for decades.
Parsons said, “Churches alone cannot fill in the gap if the government’s
social safety net is taken away. While doing their best to help, there’s not
enough capacity in all those churches to meet the gap that would happen to
if the government was to abandon tradition and, the fundamental role of
providing a basic floor to give people the basic human needs of food,
shelter, and health care.”
Sister Mary Hughes OP, President of the Leadership Conference of Women
Religious noted that “Because of the lag in current funding, homelessness is
up 15% in my state. There are usually one or more children involved in each
[homeless] family. There are faces associated with budget numbers.”
The interfaith coalition’s campaign was summed up by the Rev. John L.
McCullough:“While we don’t know what may be the final outcome of the budget
discussions between the President and Congress, proposed cuts by Members of
the House of Representatives to humanitarian and development programs are
drastic, irresponsible, and fail to recognize the detrimental life and death
consequences to vulnerable people recovering from disasters and living in
poverty worldwide.”
Christian, Jewish and Muslim institutions and faith-based organizations
united by shared beliefs to lift up the nation’s most vulnerable, are
mobilizing across the country to impact the national budget dialogue by
demonstrating that America is a better nation when we follow our faiths’
imperative to promote the general welfare of all individuals.
Letter to
Obama
Letter
to Boehner
Letter
to Pelosi
Letter to McConnell
Letter to
Reid
Contact: Adam Muhlendorf, Rabinowitz/Dorf Communications
adam@rabinowitz-dorf.com; (202) 265-3000; (202) 641-6216 (c)
Since its founding in 1950, the National Council of
the Churches of Christ in the USA has been the leading force for
shared ecumenical witness among Christians in the United States. The NCC's
37 member communions -- from a wide spectrum of Protestant, Anglican,
Orthodox, Evangelical, historic African American and Living Peace
churches -- include 45 million persons in more than 100,000 local
congregations in communities across the nation.
NCC News contact:
Philip E. Jenks, 212-870-2228 (office), 646-853-4212 (cell),
pjenks@ncccusa.org
|