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Advocacy committees vow to fight for
justice issues
Historic parley of three committees ends with a vow to pressure GAC
by Jerry L. Van Marter, Presbyterian News Service
SEATTLE -- August 25, 2000 -- With the General
Assembly Council (GAC) poised to pump more Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
resources into evangelism and church growth, three committees charged
with holding up justice issues in the church vowed during an historic
joint meeting here to press for more denominational support for women's
and racial-ethnic concerns.
Members of the committees -- the Advocacy Committee for Racial-Ethnic
Concerns (ACREC), the Advocacy Committee for Women's Concerns (ACWC) and
the Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy (ACSWP) -- decried
attempts to suggest that evangelism and social justice are mutually
exclusive.
The Aug. 17-20 meeting was the first-ever joint meeting of the three
committees, all of which were created in 1993 as part of a downsizing
and restructuring of General Assembly agencies.
Advocacy for women and racial-ethnic persons and the development of
social policy have been activities of the PC(USA) for years.
In late September, the GAC will begin realigning its budgets to make
more money available for evangelism and church growth. Those issues have
been identified in church consultations as the GAC's top priorities.
Earlier this summer, the council's executive committee decided that
"discipleship" will be its focus in the coming year.
"Your work is hampered by the fact that justice and compassion come
up lower on priority lists (than church growth and evangelism),"
Kathy Lueckert, GAC's executive director, told the committee members.
"OK, so word has come back from the church that the highest
priorities these days are evangelism and church growth -- inreach rather
than outreach," said the Rev. Curtis Jones of Baltimore, chair of
the ACREC. "This is a false dichotomy -- I don't understand how you
can have evangelism without justice. This dichotomy is not consistent
with the Gospel."
Jones told the group that it must "begin defining these terms in a
way that puts justice in a prime position and calls the church to be
prophetic" He said Jesus "could not have been who he was, had
he geared his message to focus groups."
"Discipleship is justice," said the Rev. Nile Harper, an ACSWP
member from Ann Arbor, Mich., who calls himself a left-wing evangelical.
"Discipleship is justice. Economic development, housing, education,
health -- these are justice issues that are discipleship issues. If
discipleship is the flag the GAC's flying, then we must define
discipleship in terms of these justice issues. To grow the church is to
grow the community."
The Rev. Kirk Perucca, an ACREC member from Kansas City, the executive
director of Project Equality, an organization that monitors and works
for non-discrimination in the workplace -- said debates over the
church's commitment to racial and gender justice "exemplifies the
struggle for the heart and soul of the PC(USA)." Perucca called for
resistance against "the desire of those who would keep more
narrowly defining the circles."
"Every time a new circle is drawn, those who have historically been
excluded -- those in this room -- are pushed farther and farther outside
the circles," he said.
Joanne Sizoo of Cincinnati, the ACWC, sighed and said, "I fear that
we have come to a time when we love justice more than we are willing to
do justice."
All who attended the meeting seemed to agree that the allocation of
resources is the real linchpin of the denomination's commitment to
justice for women and racial-ethnic people. On issues ranging from
minority vendors at the Presbyterian Center in Louisville to the
staffing of the ACWC, the group found what it considered an alarming
turn away from historic PC(USA) commitments to justice.
Of immediate concern to the ACWC is the issue of staffing. The Rev. Unzu
Lee provided staff services to the committee part-time until she
resigned earlier this summer.
Iris Quinones, an ACWC member from East Brunswick, N.J., said,
"Coordination of these justice concerns will not happen unless each
committee has full-time staffing." (The ACREC is staffed primarily
by Alice Broadwater, the AA/EEO officer at the Presbyterian Center).
"Committee members do not have the time and the resources to follow
the issues and marshal the resources."
Lueckert told the committees frankly that their "strategy should be
to try and get as much money as many different ways as we can."
Kearns concurred, adding: "I'm here because we need to have
discussions -- we have this job (ACWC staff) to fill, and we need to
determine how to provide the resources to ensure that advocacy is its
most effective."
Ernestine Cole told the committees, "We need to be clear about what
we want--- a full-time staff person and administrative assistant for
ACREC and ACWC." After reading the section on committee
responsibilities from the GAC's manual of operations, she added,
"We must say to the GAC, 'Here, you've given us this job -- now
give us the tools to do the job you've given us.'"
Jones, the ACREC chair, noted that contributors increasingly want to
designate mission funds to specific programs. "Restricted funds
always wreak havoc on justice ministries," he said. "We're
good at crying foul, but we haven't begun to design this church as we
would have it. We need to be more proactive about what we see and what
we believe needs to be done. My motivation in these three committees
coming together is to work together to struggle against forces in the
church that would take it . . . away from God's justice."
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