From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
Religious Leaders Urge `Civility Code' for Election Campaigns
From
PCUSA NEWS <pcusa.news@ecunet.org>
Date
17 Sep 1999 20:06:58
17-September-1999
99308
Religious Leaders Urge `Civility Code' for Election Campaigns
by Religion News Service
WASHINGTON - The Interfaith Alliance, a 5-year-old organization of
politically liberal and moderate religious activists, says it will push
political candidates to sign a "civility code" for the upcoming campaign.
"In the last six months, we have heard almost all the leading
presidential candidates express their faith as a matter of personal
conviction and belief," said the Rev. J. Philip Wogaman, alliance president
and pastor of Foundry Methodist Church in Washington, D.C. Wogaman is also
one of three spiritual counselors to President Clinton.
"We are not here to question or judge those expressions of faith," he
added. "We are here, however, to call on those seeking the highest office
in the land to put their faith in action by either embracing our Framework
for Civility or providing their own."
The civility code, released at a Washington news conference Sept.15,
calls on politicians to "talk honestly" about their beliefs, motivations
and purpose in running for office and "refrain from using deception,
half-truths, falsifications or innuendo in describing your opponents."
But at the heart of the civility code is a call to respect the dignity
of others and the diversity of religious voices in the public arena.
"Though front-runners in the presidential race talk openly about their
personal faith and values systems, neither candidate fully acknowledges the
vast diversity that characterizes the American religious landscape," said
the Rev. C. Welton Gaddy, executive director of the alliance and pastor for
preaching and worship for Northminster Baptist Church in Monroe, La.
"Candidates," added Sister Mary Carol Bennett, a Roman Catholic nun and
president of the Interfaith Alliance of Pennsylvania, "frequently assume
`litmus test' issues exist within certain faith traditions, assuming that
people of faith are single-issue voters akin to special-interest voters.
"Too often, candidates cling to the perception that there is one
faith-based position on matters of public policy," she said. "This idea
ignores both the diversity and differences that exist between people of
faith in our communities."
The civility code is part of the alliance's "Call to a Faithful
Decision 2000" project. The project will include a series of voter
education activities -- including support for voter registration programs
but not candidate-oriented voter guides - to challenge people at mosques,
synagogues, temples and churches "to renew their commitment as citizens and
as people of faith to participate in
the political process."
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