From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
Disciples challenge Cuba embargo, call for welfare reform monitoring
From
DISCNEWS.parti@ecunet.org
Date
05 Aug 1997 16:58:45
Date: August 4, 1997
Disciples News Service
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
Contact: Clifford L. Willis
Email: CWillis@oc.disciples.org
on the web: http//www.disciples.org
97b-45
DENVER (DNS) -- Nearly 8,500 members of the Christian Church
(Disciples of Christ) descended upon the Colorado Convention Center here July 25-29 as its General Assembly debated a number of international and domestic issues,
including the Cuba trade embargo and welfare reform.
The 8,411 registrations represented the highest number of Disciples present
for the biennial gathering since the contentious 1991 assembly in Tulsa. There, the
anticipated election of a controversial nominee for general minister and president, in
part, attracted nearly 9,000 persons.
A near-record number of youth -- 1,160 -- also took part in the Denver
assembly. While here they helped build houses for Habitat for Humanity, painted and
repaired park benches, and tackled other volunteer service projects.
The youth focus continued with a July 27 speech by children's advocate
Marian Wright Edelman. She challenged the denomination to take a stand for healthy
children by supporting legislation aimed at providing insurance for children of poor
families. Health care is a solvable problem, said the Children's Defense Fund
executive. No parent should have to face the "two-front battle of dealing with their
child's disease and health care poverty in our wealthy nation."
The assembly continued its opposition to the U.S.-led Cuba trade embargo,
called for removal of U.S. military from Okinawa and emphasized the importance of
Jerusalem to Christian, Moslem and Jewish faiths.
On the domestic front, the decision-making body demanded more
accountability in cases of police abuse, asked congregations and members to monitor
welfare reform, and lobbied for improved job training and employment opportunities
for African American males.
In other action, the assembly affirmed the multilingual nature of the
Indianapolis-based communion and encouraged to the church to reassert its role in sex
education. Voting representatives also accepted a call for reflection on the
participation of gay and lesbian persons in the church's life.
This issue may become a "discernment" topic, meaning the church will use
traditional Christian disciplines of prayer, Bible study, repentance, worship, witness,
discussion and deep listening. The aim is to help the whole church to listen for God's
will on the matter.
A plan to downsize the assembly's chief planning bodies was defeated, with
voters citing concerns that some groups would be under represented. The proposal
would have reduced the 240-member General Board to 126, and the 44-member
Administrative Committee to 24.
A Lexington, Ky., pastor was elected to preside over the assembly and its
committees for the next two years. The Rev. Michael Mooty, senior minister of
Central Christian Church, Lexington, was installed July 29 as moderator. Zola
Walker, a college administrator from Hawkins, Texas, was elected first vice
moderator. Donald Lucey, M.D., a Chapel Hill, N.C., physician, is the second vice
moderator.
In a first-time event called a "MissionFest," the assembly focused on the
outreach ministries of congregations. Some 60 churches shared their success stories,
ranging from an ecology project in a Lexington, Ill., church to a feeding program for
the homeless sponsored by a suburban Cleveland congregation.
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DISCNEWS - inbox for Disciples News Service, Office of Communication, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), PO Box 1986 Indianapolis, IN 46206, tele. (317) 635-3100, (DISCNEWS@ecunet.org) Wilma Shuffitt, News and Information Assistant; (CWILLIS@oc.disciples.org) Cliff Willis, Director of News and Information; (CMILLER@oc.disciples.org) Executive Director
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