The World Council of Churches Denounce
Bush
Seattle PI/AP
By BRIAN MURPHY
AP RELIGION WRITER
February 18, 2006
PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil -- A coalition of American churches sharply denounced
the U.S.-led war in Iraq on Saturday, accusing Washington of "raining down
terror" and apologizing to other nations for "the violence, degradation and
poverty our nation has sown."
The statement, issued at the largest gathering of Christian churches in
nearly a decade, also warned the United States was pushing the world toward
environmental catastrophe with a "culture of consumption" and its refusal to
back international accords seeking to battle global warming.
"We lament with special anguish the war in Iraq, launched in deception and
violating global norms of justice and human rights," said the statement from
representatives of the 34 U.S. members of World Council of Churches. "We mourn
all who have died or been injured in this war. We acknowledge with shame abuses
carried out in our name."
The World Council of Churches includes more than 350 mainstream Protestant,
Anglican and Orthodox churches; the Roman Catholic Church is not a member. The
U.S. groups in the WCC include the Episcopal Church, the Presbyterian Church
(USA), the United Methodist Church, several Orthodox churches and Baptist
denominations, among others.
The statement is part of widening religious pressure on the Bush
administration, which still counts on the support of evangelical churches and
other conservative denominations but is widely unpopular with liberal-minded
Protestant congregations.
The Very Rev. Leonid Kishkovsky, the moderator for the U.S. group of WCC
members, said the letter was backed by the leaders of the churches but was not
cleared by lower-level bodies. He predicted friction within congregations about
the tone of the message.
"There is much internal anguish and there is division," said Kishkovsky,
ecumenical officer of the Orthodox Church of America. "I believe church leaders
and communities are wrestling with the moral questions that this letter is
addressing."
On Friday, the U.S. National Council of Churches - which includes many WCC
members - released a letter appealing to Washington to close the Guantanamo Bay
detention facility and saying reports of alleged torture violated "the
fundamental Christian belief in the dignity of the human person."
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The two-page statement from the WCC group came at the midpoint of a 10-day
meeting of more than 4,000 religious leaders, scholars and activists discussing
trends and goals for major Christian denominations for the coming decades. The
WCC's last global assembly was in 1998 in Zimbabwe - just four months after
al-Qaida staged twin bombings at U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
"Our country responded (to the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks) by seeking to reclaim
a privileged and secure place in the world, raining down terror on the truly
vulnerable among our global neighbors ... entering into imperial projects that
seek to dominate and control for the sake of national interests," said the
statement. "Nations have been demonized and God has been enlisted in national
agendas that are nothing short of idolatrous."
The Rev. Sharon Watkins, president of the Christian Church (Disciples of
Christ), worried that some may interpret the statement as undermining U.S.
troops in Iraq.
"We honor their courage and sense of duty, but ... we, as people of faith,
have to say to our brothers and sisters, `We are so profoundly sorry,'" Watkins
said.
The message also accused U.S. officials of ignoring warnings about climate
change and treating the world's "finite resources as if they are private
possessions." It went on to criticize U.S. domestic policies for refusing to
confront racism and poverty.
"Hurricane Katrina revealed to the world those left behind in our own nation
by the rupture of our social contract," said the statement.
The churches said they had "grown heavy with guilt" for not doing enough to
speak out against the Iraq war and other issues. The statement asked
forgiveness for a world that's "grown weary from the violence, degradation and
poverty our nation has sown."
On the Net:
World Council of Churches: http://www.wcc-coe.org
World Council of Churches, US: http://www.wcc-usa.org
National Council of Churches USA: http://www.ncccusa.org/
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