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Peace depends on ‘courageous remnant’

 
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7:00 A.M. ET Dec. 9, 2011 | LAKE JUNALUSKA, N.C. (UMNS)



The Rev. Bob Edgar (center) walks to the U.S. Capitol to raise his voice on behalf of the poor and vulnerable as Congress debates budget cuts. A web-only photo courtesy of Common Cause.
The Rev. Bob Edgar (center) walks to the U.S. Capitol to raise his voice on behalf of the poor and vulnerable as Congress debates budget cuts. A web-only photo courtesy of Common Cause.

The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. used nonviolent civil disobedience to change the world and society, but the church is too afraid of what others will think to take the same risks, says the Rev. Bob Edgar.

“How sad it is now that our churches are so passive, so quiet. You guys are genetically nice,” Edgar told 302 participants at the fourth annual Lake Junaluska Peace Conference in November.

“Sometimes you’ve got to speak up when people tell you to sit down, and you have to speak out when people tell you to be silent,” he said. “You’ve got to be out on the edge a bit. Jesus was out on the edge. He got crucified for it.”

A United Methodist elder and president of Common Cause, a national advocacy group, Edgar spoke on the last day of the three-day conference that was called “Poverty, Abundance and Peace: Seeking Economic Justice for All God’s Children.”

Edgar was one of two United Methodists arrested last July with nine other faith leaders in the Capitol Rotunda after refusing to stop public prayers. The other United Methodist was Jim Winkler, top executive of the United Methodist Board of Church and Society.

“On the 29th of July, we had the audacity to go into the rotunda of the Capitol of the United States and kneel in prayer, and the Capitol police arrested us,” Edgar said. “We were there to have a voice for the voiceless.”

Politeness vs. clubs and dogs

The speaker contrasted the politeness of the police who arrested him with the clubs and dogs used to curb King and civil rights activists of the 1950s and ’60s. 

“When arrested at the rotunda, I had five honorary doctorates but only four arrests for civil disobedience. You are now seeing a balanced Bob Edgar,” he said. “If I have any regrets in my life, it’s that I haven’t been arrested enough.”

Edgar walked listeners through his career path as a young pastor, six-term U.S. congressman from Pennsylvania, president of Claremont School of Theology, top executive of the National Council of Churches and president of Common Cause since 2007.

He said he was influenced by leaders like King, whom he heard preach in Washington, D.C., during his senior year at Drew Theological Seminary — just five weeks before King was assassinated in April 1968. Edgar said he also was shaped by his experience as a young pastor in a Pennsylvania town that had been environmentally and economically abused by a coal company.

Young people need to see the church step up for change, and they need role models, Edgar said.

“You can’t teach courage and risk-taking, but you can help people understand it with hands-on experience.

“Too often our young people only see the conservative posture, the lack of taking risks on the part of our faith community, and they do not learn the ability to speak.”

“We are the leaders we are waiting for,” Edgar repeated as he said pastors should train their congregations to allow the “born-again social justice gang,” which might comprise only 10 to 12 percent of the flock, to have a voice.

“Let the other 90 percent have their club,” he said.

‘Courageous remnant’

The “courageous remnant” — not the majority — has historically made the greatest strides for peace, he said.

“We get so frustrated with Pat Robertson that we forget to teach people inside our churches that Jesus was a peacemaker.”

The Common Cause leader warned that the nation’s founding fathers did not intend for money to be used as a form of speech. Common Cause, which was founded in 1970 by Republican John Gardner as a “people’s lobby,” is now working on campaign finance reform to stop corporations and billionaires from influencing legislators, he said.

“2012 will be the most moneyed election in the history of the U.S., and it’s only the beginning,” Edgar said.

“They’re buying our legislative democracy … Let’s go back to a representative democracy … We need to occupy democracy.”

Edgar received applause when he critiqued economic stability tactics that “depend on a percent of people being under- or unemployed and a percentage of the world‘s population being enslaved or underpaid.”

“When ballplayers are getting paid more than teachers, why not re-order those priorities?” Edgar said. “It’s time to critique capitalism.”

*Spence is editor of The Call for the Holston Annual (regional) Conference.

News media contact, Maggie Hillery, Nashville, Tenn. (615)-742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org

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Showing 4 comments

  • Joe Hamby 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand

    No, Eric, Bob Edgar doesn't disagree with the way free people spend their money. The Bible does. Read yours. Start with Acts 2:43-47, a picture of the earliest Christian community. What exactly is your vision of the church? I'd be interested in reading more.

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  • rkoch27 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand

      Where was this organization when the government took over the welfare roll?? If the churches were working on a common cause of providing for the poor at that time maybe the government would not have taken onj this task, although I doubt it. The government took this on as a control over people in order to make them beholding to them.
      The government has so much waste that any program they run is inefficient, I do not give ot any organization that doen not provide approximatly 80% to the intendet tageted cause. Unfortunatly the GAO estimates at least 30% waste and fraud in the government programs for the poor then you have to take adminstrative costs off on top of that. With the government benifits I estimate we are lucky if 50% of our tax dollars are distributed to the poor. If we are really serious about helping the poor all Christian churches should band together on this issue and provide for the poor.
        Educate people on John Wesley's theoligy of sufficent, and there should be sufficient funds provided. not only would more mone reach the poor, if the programs are run properly, much of the fraud would be eliminated.THIS IS A CAUSE REALLY WORTH FIGHTING FOR.
       Lets work at getting the government out of places they do not belong. If you look at the statisics oin the war on poverty the numbers of people has not dimenished signifcantly since Pres. Johnson started the program.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W.... We are throwing good money on bad with the government controled program. Can't we as Christians do better???
       

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  • Eric_Mueller 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand

    #1 This nation is not now and never have been a democracy.  A democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on what is for dinner.
     
    #2 Just in case you missed the irony of this thing, a representative democracy, our elected school board, is how teacher’s salaries are set.
     
    #3 To Bob Edgar: I would love to hear you “critique” of capitalism.  Your comment on some baseball players making more then teachers indicate to me that you think baseball players are paid too much or teachers are paid too little.  The thing that makes no sense to me is that both of these people and every other person in a free market has already been voted on.  There customers vote with there wallets, if we don’t like them, if we don’t like what they do or how they do it we keep our money and they go out of business.  What you are in fact saying by criticizing ball player and bankers and CEO’s is that you disagree with the way that free people have spent there money.  You are saying look I’m smarter then you, I’m more enlightened then you, I’m better then you and I will determine who gets what money how much and for what.  You don’t want anything like a democracy or a constitutional republic, what you want is a dictatorship where you and people with whom you agree with set everyone else’s priorities and decides what the best use of our labor, effort and money would be.  This argument is not new or original, it’s the same one made by Trotsky, Marx, Lennon and Mao, it has never worked anywhere it has been tried and it won’t work here.  No society has ever been mad deter by being made less free. 
     
    #4. Your word play is not clever, you are not a courageous remnant, your just a loud tiny minority. The rest of us are completely aware of the things about which you speak, we have just as strong opinions and we work just as hard to bring our vision for the church and the world to light.  The difference is that we understand that the things you are upset about are political matters, not church matters.  If you think it is OK to tear the Church apart so that you can advance your completely political agenda than that is something you will have to live with.  

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  • Michael M 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand

    I applaud Rev.Edgars actions - but to be clear on the matter, he was not arrested for praying, as the article implies; he was arrested for demonstrating inside the Capitol building, a misdemeanor.

    http://www.politico.com/blogs/...

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