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A UMNS Report
By Linda Bloom and Kathy L. Gilbert*
1:00 P.M. ET Dec. 21, 2012
A memorial of candles, flowers, stuffed animals and cards honors the
children and adults who died in the Dec. 14 shooting at Sandy Hook
Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. A UMNS photo by Arthur McClanahan,
Iowa Annual Conference.
View in Photo Gallery
As church bells across the country tolled for those who lost their
lives in Newtown, Conn., United Methodist Bishop Peter Weaver and other
religious leaders spoke about the need for compassion and for
safeguards against future gun violence.
During a Dec. 21 news conference outside the Washington National
Cathedral, the interfaith leaders sounded a recurring theme about the
need for a safety net for those trying to deal with mental illness and
legislation to address concerns over handguns, assault weapons and
ammunition magazines, said Weaver, executive secretary of the United
Methodist Council of Bishops.
The news conference included the tolling of the cathedral’s funeral
bell at 9:30 a.m. ET, the time of the shootings one week ago. At the
same time, CNN broadcast the ringing of the church bell at Newtown United Methodist Church
by the church’s pastors, the Rev. Mel Kawakami, the Rev. Jane Sibley
and the Rev. E. Sue Klein. The bell rang 28 times there in memory of
the 28 victims of the Dec. 14 tragedy in Newtown and its Sandy Hook
Elementary School.
“We are at the heart of Sandy Hook,”
Kawakami said earlier. “This is the right time to pause, offer prayer
and remember each life that was lost, and to put our trust in God.”
In Washington, Rabbi David Saperstein, Religious Action Center of
Reform Judaism, said the interfaith leaders had gathered to respond to
the question of whether “sensible gun control” is a religious issue.
Their answer is an unqualified yes. “The indiscriminate
distribution of guns is an offense against God and humanity,”
Saperstein said. “Our gun-flooded, violence-prone society has turned
weapons into idols. And the appropriate religious response to idolatry
is sustained moral outrage.”
Weaver agreed.
“This must become a matter of moral conscience, not just politics,”
Weaver said. “It’s not about Republicans or Democrats; it’s about our
children and what some have called a ‘national epidemic’ of gun
violence.”
The United Methodist Church will continue to work on the issue
through Faiths United Against Gun Violence. On the weekend of Jan. 5-6,
that organization and the National Council of Churches are asking
congregations around the country to hold a Gun Violence Prevention Sabbath. Churches can offer sermons, prayers and education forums against gun violence.
Saperstein also announced that clergy and social justice leaders
would be encouraged to
mobilize thousands of telephone calls to Congress Feb. 4 to demand
that effective action toward sensible gun control be taken immediately.
Longtime concern over gun violence
Many people of faith have spoken out
during what has become a week of national mourning. Weaver pointed out
that United Methodists have supported a national ban on ownership by
the public of handguns and assault weapons.
“That fact that we keep putting off what the president calls
meaningful action and conversation has just left the door open for more
and more gun violence,” Weaver said.
The denomination’s current position on gun violence,
first adopted in 2000 and modified in 2008, supports federal
legislation in the U.S. Congress to regulate the importation,
manufacturing, sale and possession of guns and ammunition by the
public. It also recommends concrete steps for action. Previous
statements of concern predate that resolution.
Bishop Peter Weaver
Even four years ago, The United Methodist Church noted that the risk of handgun violence to children and youth was greater than ever before.
"Communities and schools in the United States are so exposed to large
numbers of privately owned guns that no mere attempts at providing
slightly better security can match the awful threat of guns finding
their way through our well-intentioned safety systems," the resolution
says.
In 2009, gun violence in Philadelphia led a group of religious
leaders to form a grassroots coalition to prevent gun stores from
selling “straw purchases” — guns legally bought then sold to people who
cannot buy guns.
On Dec. 19, those faith leaders held a rally calling gun violence a
“moral, spiritual and religious issue” and urging congregations to put
feet to their faith in any way possible to stop another deadly shooting.
The rally was at a historic site where faith leaders came together
in 1838 to name slavery as a moral, spiritual and religious issue, said
the Rev. James F. McIntire, pastor of Hope United Methodist Church,
Havertown, Pa., and chair of Heeding God’s Call.
“We are not anti-gun or anti-Second Amendment rights, but we have a
moral responsibility to step out and be a visible presence to stop gun
violence,” he said.
McIntire said United Methodist Bishop Peggy Johnson spoke at the Dec. 19 rally and has supported Heeding God’s Call since it started.
Write letters
Bill Mefford, United Methodist Board of Church and Society, is asking other congregations
to join his own church, Culmore United Methodist Church in Virginia,
in writing letters to President Obama and Congress members urging them
to make gun ownership more responsible and to ban assault weapons. He
said he has received numerous messages via Facebook from people wanting
to do something to make their voices heard.
“As a result of these kinds of feelings, I heard that the White
House, since Newtown, has received over 300,000 email messages asking
for an end to gun violence,” he told United Methodist News Service. “So,
that is definitely an outcry, and I feel like people are tired of the
violence and then the usual people/groups defending their Second
Amendment rights (when no one is even close to asking for any kind of
repeal of the Second Amendment).”
The Board of Church and Society wants to update the denomination’s resolution on gun control to include, among other things, a ban on assault weapons.
"I am excited to see the president move so quickly to set up the
Task Force on Gun Violence and to demand a plan on how to move forward
within the next month,” Mefford said. “Time is of the essence, as every
day over 75 people die of gun violence. That's three Newtown massacres
every single day.
“Strengthening a ban on military assault weapons and high-capacity
gun clips, making universal background checks mandatory on every single
gun that is sold in the United States, and stopping the illegal
trafficking of guns worldwide are necessary and well-supported first
steps towards saving lives.”
Consequences of daily violence
The consequences go beyond horrific events like the Newtown shooting
that capture the nation’s attention. “Every day, there are children and
adults who lose their lives or are seriously injured by gun violence,”
Weaver noted.
Recalling the charge by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to change
“thin paper into thick action,” Weaver offered his own version: “Turn
tired tears of sorrow into thick action.”
“Thick action” to Weaver means being communities of compassion for
those in mourning, for the nearly 300 who die or are injured every day
from gun violence and for those with mental health and emotional needs
who often are neglected.
In addition, “communities of conscience” must prophetically claim
the difference between right and wrong. “Too often, the church recently
has been silent in addressing those things which continue to — in the
media and in other places — glorify violence,” Weaver said.
As “communities of concrete commitment,” United Methodists and other
religious believers can model the "social policies and personal
lifestyles that bring an end to senseless gun violence," Weaver said in
his news conference statement.
“As a nation we have devoted massive resources to address our
concern about terrorism coming from ‘the outside,’ but the terrorism of
gun violence coming from the ‘inside,’ taking our children and other
innocent lives daily now demands that we devote massive courage and
resources to address gun violence in all of its complexities,” Weaver
said.
The Dec. 21 event was organized by the Washington National Cathedral and the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism.
In addition to Weaver and Saperstein, other speakers included
Theodore Cardinal McCarrick, former archbishop of Washington; the Right
Rev. Mariann Edgar Budde, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of
Washington; the Very Rev. Gary Hall, dean of Washington National
Cathedral; and Imam Mohamed Magid, president of the Islamic Society of
North America.
Also, the Rev. Michael Livingston, past president
of the National Council of Churches; Rabbi Julie Schonfeld, executive
vice president, Rabbinical Assembly; the Rev. Gabriel Salguero and Rev.
Joshua Rodriguez, National Latino Evangelical Coalition; the Rev.
Carroll A. Baltimore Sr., president, Progressive National Baptist
Convention; and the Rev. Richard Cizik, president of New Evangelical
Partnership for the Common Good.
Heads of office participating were Dr. Rajwant Singh, chairman, Sikh
Council on Religion and Education; Sandy Sorenson, Justice and Witness
Ministries, United Church of Christ; Nathan Diament, Institute for
Public Affairs, Orthodox Union; Diane Randall, executive secretary,
Friends Committee on National Legislation; and Curtis Ramsey-Lucas,
American Baptist Church.
For information on resources and responses from The United Methodist Church related to school violence, please visit www.umc.org/schoolviolence.
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service multimedia reporter based in New York. Follow her at http://twitter.com/umcscribe. Gilbert is a young adult content reporter based in Nashville.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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