161
II. The Nurturing Community
The community provides the potential for nurturing
human beings into the fullness of their humanity. We believe we have a
responsibility to innovate, sponsor, and evaluate new forms of community
that will encourage development of the fullest potential in
individuals. Primary for us is the gospel understanding that all persons
are important—because they are human beings created by God and loved
through and by Jesus Christ and not because they have merited
significance. We therefore support social climates in which human
communities are maintained and strengthened for the sake of all persons
and their growth. We also encourage all individuals to be sensitive to
others by using appropriate language when referring to all persons.
Language of a derogatory nature (with regard to race, nationality,
ethnic background, gender, sexuality, and physical difference) does not
reflect value for one another and contradicts the gospel of Jesus
Christ.
A) The Family
We believe the family to be the basic human community through which
persons are nurtured and sustained in mutual love, responsibility,
respect, and fidelity. We affirm the importance of both fathers and
mothers for all children. We also understand the family as encompassing a
wider range of options than that of the two-generational unit of
parents and children (the nuclear family), including the extended
family, families with adopted children, single parents, stepfamilies,
and couples without children. We affirm shared responsibility for
parenting by men and women and encourage social, economic, and religious
efforts to maintain and strengthen relationships within families in
order that every member may be assisted toward complete personhood.
b) Other Christian Communities
We further recognize the movement to find new patterns of Christian
nurturing communities such as Koinonia Farms, certain monastic and other
religious orders, and some types of corporate church life. We urge the
Church to seek ways of understanding the needs and concerns of such
Christian groups and to find ways of ministering to them and through
them.
C) Marriage
We affirm the sanctity of the marriage covenant that is expressed in
love, mutual support, personal commitment, and shared fidelity between a
man and a woman. We believe that God's blessing rests upon such
marriage, whether or not there are children of the union. We reject
social norms that assume different standards for women than for men in
marriage. We support laws in civil society that define marriage as the
union of one man and one woman.
D) Divorce
God's plan is for lifelong, faithful marriage. The church must be on the
forefront of premarital and postmarital counseling in order to create
and preserve strong marriages. However, when a married couple is
estranged beyond reconciliation, even after thoughtful consideration and
counsel, divorce is a regrettable alternative in the midst of
brokenness. We grieve over the devastating emotional, spiritual, and
economic consequences of divorce for all involved and are concerned
about high divorce rates.
It is recommended that methods of
mediation be used to minimize the adversarial nature and fault-finding
that are often part of our current judicial processes. Although divorce
publicly declares that a marriage no longer exists, other covenantal
relationships resulting from the marriage remain, such as the nurture
and support of children and extended family ties. We urge respectful
negotiations in deciding the custody of minor children and support the
consideration of either or both parents for this responsibility in that
custody not be reduced to financial support, control, or manipulation
and retaliation. The welfare of each child is the most important
consideration. Divorce does not preclude a new marriage. We encourage an
intentional commitment of the Church and society to minister
compassionately to those in the process of divorce, as well as members
of divorced and remarried families, in a community of faith where God’s
grace is shared by all.
E) Single Persons
We affirm the integrity of single persons, and we reject all
social practices that discriminate or social attitudes that are
prejudicial against persons because they are single.
F) Women and Men
We affirm with Scripture the common humanity of male and female, both
having equal worth in the eyes of God. We reject the erroneous notion
that one gender is superior to another, that one gender must strive
against another, and that members of one gender may receive love, power
and esteem only at the expense of another.
We especially reject
the idea that God made individuals as incomplete fragments, made whole
only in union with another. We call upon women and men alike to share
power and control, to learn to give freely and to receive freely, to be
complete and to respect the wholeness of others. We seek for every
individual opportunities and freedom to love and be loved, to seek and
receive justice, and to practice ethical self-determination.
We
understand our gender diversity to be a gift from God, intended to add
to the rich variety of human experience and perspective; and we guard
against attitudes and traditions that would use this good gift to leave
members of one sex more vulnerable in relationships than members of
another.
G) Human Sexuality
We recognize that sexuality is God's good gift to all persons.
We believe persons may be fully human only when that gift is
acknowledged and affirmed by themselves, the church, and society. We
call all persons to the disciplined, responsible fulfillment of
themselves, others, and society in the stewardship of this gift. We also
recognize our limited understanding of this complex gift and encourage
the medical, theological, and social science disciplines to combine in a
determined effort to understand human sexuality more completely. We
call the Church to take the leadership role in bringing together these
disciplines to address this most complex issue. Further, within the
context of our understanding of this gift of God, we recognize that God
challenges us to find responsible, committed, and loving forms of
expression.
Although all persons are sexual beings whether or not
they are married, sexual relations are only clearly affirmed in the
marriage bond. Sex may become exploitative within as well as outside
marriage. We reject all sexual expressions that damage or destroy the
humanity God has given us as birthright, and we affirm only that sexual
expression that enhances that same humanity. We believe that sexual
relations where one or both partners are exploitative, abusive, or
promiscuous are beyond the parameters of acceptable Christian behavior
and are ultimately destructive to individuals, families, and the social
order.
We deplore all forms of the commercialization and
exploitation of sex, with their consequent cheapening and degradation of
human personality. We call for strict global enforcement of laws
prohibiting the sexual exploitation or use of children by adults and
encourage efforts to hold perpetrators legally and financially
responsible. We call for the establishment of adequate protective
services, guidance, and counseling opportunities for children thus
abused. We insist that all persons, regardless of age, gender, marital
status, or sexual orientation, are entitled to have their human and
civil rights ensured.
We recognize the continuing need for full,
positive, age-appropriate and factual sex education opportunities for
children, young people, and adults. The Church offers a unique
opportunity to give quality guidance and education in this area.
Homosexual
persons no less than heterosexual persons are individuals of sacred
worth. All persons need the ministry and guidance of the church in their
struggles for human fulfillment, as well as the spiritual and emotional
care of a fellowship that enables reconciling relationships with God,
with others, and with self. The United Methodist Church does not condone
the practice of homosexuality and considers this practice incompatible
with Christian teaching. We affirm that God's grace is available to all,
and we will seek to live together in Christian community. We implore
families and churches not to reject or condemn lesbian and gay members
and friends. We commit ourselves to be in ministry for and with all
persons.1
1. See Judicial Council Decision 702.
H) Family Violence and Abuse
We recognize that family violence and abuse in all its forms—verbal,
psychological, physical, sexual— is detrimental to the covenant of the
human community. We encourage the Church to provide a safe environment,
counsel, and support for the victim. While we deplore the actions of the
abuser, we affirm that person to be in need of God's redeeming love.
We believe human sexuality is God’s good gift. One abuse of this good
gift is sexual harassment. We define sexual harassment as any unwanted
sexual comment, advance or demand, either verbal or physical, that is
reasonably perceived by the recipient as demeaning, intimidating, or
coercive. Sexual harassment must be understood as an exploitation of a
power relationship rather than as an exclusively sexual issue. Sexual
harassment includes, but is not limited to, the creation of a hostile or
abusive working environment resulting from discrimination on the basis
of gender.
Contrary to the nurturing community, sexual harassment
creates improper, coercive, and abusive conditions wherever it occurs in
society. Sexual harassment undermines the social goal of equal
opportunity and the climate of mutual respect between men and women.
Unwanted sexual attention is wrong and discriminatory. Sexual harassment
interferes with the moral mission of the Church.
J) Abortion
The beginning of life and the ending of life are the God-given
boundaries of human existence. While individuals have always had some
degree of control over when they would die, they now have the awesome
power to determine when and even whether new individuals will be born.
Our
belief in the sanctity of unborn human life makes us reluctant to
approve abortion. But we are equally bound to respect the sacredness of
the life and well-being of the mother, for whom devastating damage may
result from an unacceptable pregnancy. In continuity with past Christian
teaching, we recognize tragic conflicts of life with life that may
justify abortion, and in such cases we support the legal option of
abortion under proper medical procedures. We cannot affirm abortion as
an acceptable means of birth control, and we unconditionally reject it
as a means of gender selection.
We oppose the use of late-term
abortion known as dilation and extraction (partial-birth abortion) and
call for the end of this practice except when the physical life of the
mother is in danger and no other medical procedure is available, or in
the case of severe fetal anomalies incompatible with life. We call all
Christians to a searching and prayerful inquiry into the sorts of
conditions that may warrant abortion. We commit our Church to continue
to provide nurturing ministries to those who terminate a pregnancy, to
those in the midst of a crisis pregnancy, and to those who give birth.
We particularly encourage the Church, the government, and social service
agencies to support and facilitate the option of adoption. (See ¶
161.K.)
Governmental laws and regulations do not provide all the
guidance required by the informed Christian conscience. Therefore, a
decision concerning abortion should be made only after thoughtful and
prayerful consideration by the parties involved, with medical, pastoral,
and other appropriate counsel.
?) Ministry to Those Who Have Experienced an Abortion
We
urge local pastors to become informed about the symptoms and behaviors
associated with post-abortion stress. We further encourage local
churches to make available contact information for counseling agencies
that offer programs to address post-abortion stress for all seeking
help.
K) Adoption
Children are a gift from God to be welcomed and received. We
recognize that some circumstances of birth make the rearing of a child
difficult.
We affirm and support the birth parent(s) whose choice
it is to allow the child to be adopted. We recognize the agony,
strength, and courage of the birth parent(s) who choose(s) in hope,
love, and prayer to offer the child for adoption.
In addition, we
also recognize the anxiety, strength, and courage of those who choose
in hope, love, and prayer to be able to care for a child.
We
affirm and support the adoptive parent(s)' desire to rear an adopted
child as they would a biological child. When circumstances warrant
adoption, we support the use of proper legal procedures. When
appropriate and possible, we encourage open adoption so that a child may
know all information and people related to them, both medically and
relationally. We support and encourage greater awareness and education
to promote adoption of a wide variety of children through foster care,
international adoption, and domestic adoption.
We commend the
birth parent(s), the receiving parent(s), and the child to the care of
the Church, that grief might be shared, joy might be celebrated, and the
child might be nurtured in a community of Christian love.
L) Faithful Care of the Dying
While we applaud medical science for efforts to prevent disease and
illness and for advances in treatment that extend the meaningful life of
human beings, we recognize that every mortal life will ultimately end
in death. Death is never a sign that God has abandoned us, no matter
what the circumstances of the death might be. As Christians we must
always be prepared to surrender the gift of mortal life and claim the
gift of eternal life through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Care for dying persons is part of our stewardship of the divine gift of
life when cure is no longer possible. We encourage the use of medical
technologies to provide palliative care at the end of life when
life-sustaining treatments no longer support the goals of life, and when
they have reached their limits. There is no moral or religious
obligation to use these when they impose undue burdens or only extend
the process of dying. Dying persons and their families are free to
discontinue treatments when they cease to be of benefit to the patient.
We
recognize the agonizing personal and moral decisions faced by the
dying, their physicians, their families, their friends and their faith
community. We urge that decisions faced by the dying be made with
thoughtful and prayerful consideration by the parties involved, with
medical, pastoral, and other appropriate counsel. We further urge that
all persons discuss with their families, their physicians and their
pastoral counselors, their wishes for care at the end of life and
provide advance directives for such care when they are not able to make
these decisions for themselves. Even when one accepts the inevitability
of death, the church and society must continue to provide faithful care,
including pain relief, companionship, support, and spiritual nurture
for the dying person in the hard work of preparing for death. We
encourage and support the concept of hospice care whenever possible at
the end of life. Faithful care does not end at death but continues
during bereavement as we care for grieving families.
M) Suicide
We believe that suicide is not the way a human life should end. Often
suicide is the result of untreated depression, or untreated pain and
suffering. The church has an obligation to see that all persons have
access to needed pastoral and medical care and therapy in those
circumstances that lead to loss of self-worth, suicidal despair, and/or
the desire to seek physician-assisted suicide. We encourage the church
to provide education to address the biblical, theological, social, and
ethical issues related to death and dying, including suicide. United
Methodist theological seminary courses should also focus on issues of
death and dying, including suicide.
A Christian perspective on
suicide begins with an affirmation of faith that nothing, including
suicide, separates us from the love of God (Romans 8:38-39). Therefore,
we deplore the condemnation of people who complete suicide, and we
consider unjust the stigma that so often falls on surviving family and
friends.
We encourage pastors and faith communities to address
this issue through preaching and teaching. We urge pastors and faith
communities to provide pastoral care to those at risk, survivors, and
their families, and to those families who have lost loved ones to
suicide, seeking always to remove the oppressive stigma around suicide.
The Church opposes assisted suicide and euthanasia.
162
III The Social Community
The rights and privileges a society bestows upon
or withholds from those who comprise it indicate the relative esteem in
which that society holds particular persons and groups of persons.
We
affirm all persons as equally valuable in the sight of God. We
therefore work toward societies in which each person’s value is
recognized, maintained, and strengthened.
We support the basic
rights of all persons to equal access to housing, education,
communication, employment, medical care, legal redress for grievances,
and physical protection. We deplore acts of hate or violence against
groups or persons based on race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation,
religious affiliation, or economic status.
A) Rights of Racial and Ethnic Persons
Racism is the combination of the power to dominate by one race over
other races and a value system that assumes that the dominant race is
innately superior to the others. Racism includes both personal and
institutional racism. Personal racism is manifested through the
individual expressions, attitudes, and/or behaviors that accept the
assumptions of a racist value system and that maintain the benefits of
this system.
Institutional racism is the established social
pattern that supports implicitly or explicitly the racist value system.
Racism plagues and cripples our growth in Christ, inasmuch as it is
antithetical to the gospel itself. White people are unfairly granted
privileges and benefits that are denied to persons of color. Racism
breeds racial discrimination. We define racial discrimination as the
disparate treatment and lack of full access to resources and
opportunities in the church and in society based on race or ethnicity.
Therefore, we recognize racism as sin and affirm the ultimate and
temporal worth of all persons.
We rejoice in the gifts that
particular ethnic histories and cultures bring to our total life. We
commend and encourage the self-awareness of all racial and ethnic groups
and oppressed people that leads them to demand their just and equal
rights as members of society. We assert the obligation of society and
groups within the society to implement compensatory programs that
redress long-standing, systemic social deprivation of racial and ethnic
people.
We further assert the right of members of racial and
ethnic groups to equal opportunities in employment and promotion; to
education and training of the highest quality; to nondiscrimination in
voting, in access to public accommodations, and in housing purchase or
rental; to credit, financial loans, venture capital, and insurance
policies; and to positions of leadership and power in all elements of
our life together. We support affirmative action as one method of
addressing the inequalities and discriminatory practices within our
Church and society.
B) Rights of Religious Minorities
Religious persecution has been common in the history of civilization. We
urge policies and practices that ensure the right of every religious
group to exercise its faith free from legal, political, or economic
restrictions. We condemn all overt and covert forms of religious
intolerance, being especially sensitive to their expression in media
stereotyping. We assert the right of all religions and their adherents
to freedom from legal, economic, and social discrimination.
C) Rights of Children
Once considered the property of their parents, children are now
acknowledged to be full human beings in their own right, but beings to
whom adults and society in general have special obligations.
Thus,
we support the development of school systems and innovative methods of
education designed to assist every child toward complete fulfillment as
an individual person of worth. All children have the right to quality
education, including full sex education appropriate to their stage of
development that utilizes the best educational techniques and insights.
Christian
parents and guardians and the Church have the responsibility to ensure
that children receive sex education consistent with Christian morality,
including faithfulness in marriage and abstinence in singleness.
Moreover, children have the rights to food, shelter, clothing, health
care, and emotional well-being as do adults, and these rights we affirm
as theirs regardless of actions or inactions of their parents or
guardians. In particular, children must be protected from economic,
physical, and sexual exploitation and abuse.
D) Rights of Young People
Our society is characterized by a large population of youth
and young adults who frequently find full participation in society
difficult. Therefore, we urge development of policies that encourage
inclusion of youth and young adults in decision-making processes and
that eliminate discrimination and exploitation. Creative and appropriate
employment opportunities should be legally and socially available for
youth and young adults.
E) Rights of the Aging
In a society that places primary emphasis upon youth, those growing old
in years are frequently isolated from the mainstream of social
existence. We support social policies that integrate the aging into the
life of the total community, including sufficient incomes, increased and
nondiscriminatory employment opportunities, educational and service
opportunities, and adequate medical care and housing within existing
communities. We urge social policies and programs, with emphasis on the
unique concerns of older women and ethnic persons, that ensure to the
aging the respect and dignity that is their right as senior members of
the human community. Further, we urge increased consideration for
adequate pension systems by employers, with provisions for the surviving
spouse.
F) Rights of Women
We affirm women and men to be equal in every aspect of their common
life. We therefore urge that every effort be made to eliminate sex-role
stereotypes in activity and portrayal of family life and in all aspects
of voluntary and compensatory participation in the Church and society.
We
affirm the right of women to equal treatment in employment,
responsibility, promotion, and compensation. We affirm the importance of
women in decision-making positions at all levels of Church life and
urge such bodies to guarantee their presence through policies of
employment and recruitment.
We support affirmative action as one
method of addressing the inequalities and discriminatory practices
within our Church and society. We urge employers of persons in dual
career families, both in the Church and society, to apply proper
consideration of both parties when relocation is considered.
We
affirm the right of women to live free from violence and abuse and urge
governments to enact policies that protect women against all forms of
violence and discrimination in any sector of society.
G) Rights of Persons with Disabilities
We recognize and affirm the full humanity and personhood of all
individuals with mental, physical, developmental, neurological, and
psychological conditions or disabilities as full members of the family
of God. We also affirm their rightful place in both the Church and
society. We affirm the responsibility of the Church and society to be in
ministry with children, youth, and adults with mental, physical,
developmental, and/or psychological and neurological conditions or
disabilities whose particular needs in the areas of mobility,
communication, intellectual comprehension, or personal relationships
might make more challenging their participation or that of their
families in the life of the Church and the community. We urge the Church
and society to recognize and receive the gifts of persons with
disabilities to enable them to be full participants in the community of
faith. We call the Church and society to be sensitive to, and advocate
for, programs of rehabilitation, services, employment, education,
appropriate housing, and transportation. We call on the Church and
society to protect the civil rights of persons with all types and kinds
of disabilities.
H) Equal Rights Regardless of Sexual Orientation
Certain basic human rights and civil liberties are due all persons.
We are committed to supporting those rights and liberties for homosexual
persons.
We see a clear issue of simple justice in protecting
their rightful claims where they have shared material resources,
pensions, guardian relationships, mutual powers of attorney, and other
such lawful claims typically attendant to contractual relationships that
involve shared contributions, responsibilities, and liabilities, and
equal protection before the law.
Moreover, we support efforts to
stop violence and other forms of coercion against gays and lesbians. We
also commit ourselves to social witness against the coercion and
marginalization of former homosexuals.
H) Population
Since the growing worldwide population is increasingly straining the
world’s supply of food, minerals, and water and sharpening international
tensions, the reduction of the rate of consumption of resources by the
affluent and the reduction of current world population growth rates have
become imperative.
People have the duty to consider the
impact on the total world community of their decisions regarding
childbearing and should have access to information and appropriate means
to limit their fertility, including voluntary sterilization.
We
affirm that programs to achieve a stabilized population should be placed
in a context of total economic and social development, including an
equitable use and control of resources; improvement in the status of
women in all cultures; a human level of economic security, health care,
and literacy for all. We oppose any policy of forced abortion or forced
sterilization.
I) Alcohol and Other Drugs
We affirm our long-standing support of abstinence from alcohol as a
faithful witness to God's liberating and redeeming love for persons. We
support abstinence from the use of any illegal drugs. Since the use of
illegal drugs, as well as illegal and problematic use of alcohol, is a
major factor in crime, disease, death, and family dysfunction, we
support educational programs as well as other prevention strategies
encouraging abstinence from illegal drug use and, with regard to those
who choose to consume alcoholic beverages, judicious use with deliberate
and intentional restraint, with Scripture as a guide.
Millions of
living human beings are testimony to the beneficial consequences of
therapeutic drug use, and millions of others are testimony to the
detrimental consequences of drug misuse. We encourage wise policies
relating to the availability of potentially beneficial or potentially
damaging prescription and over-the-counter drugs; we urge that complete
information about their use and misuse be readily available to both
doctor and patient. We support the strict administration of laws
regulating the sale and distribution of alcohol and controlled
substances. We support regulations that protect society from users of
drugs of any kind, including alcohol, where it can be shown that a clear
and present social danger exists. Drug-dependent persons and their
family members, including those who are assessed or diagnosed as
dependent on alcohol, are individuals of infinite human worth deserving
of treatment, rehabilitation, and ongoing life-changing recovery. Misuse
or abuse may also require intervention, in order to prevent progression
into dependence. Because of the frequent interrelationship between
alcohol abuse and mental illness, we call upon legislators and health
care providers to make available appropriate mental illness treatment
and rehabilitation for drug-dependent persons. We commit ourselves to
assisting those who suffer from abuse or dependence, and their families,
in finding freedom through Jesus Christ and in finding good
opportunities for treatment, for ongoing counseling, and for
reintegration into society.
K) Tobacco
We affirm our historic tradition of high standards of personal
discipline and social responsibility. In light of the overwhelming
evidence that tobacco smoking and the use of smokeless tobacco are
hazardous to the health of persons of all ages, we recommend total
abstinence from the use of tobacco.
We urge that our educational
and communication resources be utilized to support and encourage such
abstinence. Further, we recognize the harmful effects of passive smoke
and support the restriction of smoking in public areas and workplaces.
L) Medical Experimentation
Physical and mental health has been greatly enhanced through discoveries by medical science.
It
is imperative, however, that governments and the medical profession
carefully enforce the requirements of the prevailing medical research
standard, maintaining rigid controls in testing new technologies and
drugs utilizing human beings.
The standard requires that those
engaged in research shall use human beings as research subjects only
after obtaining full, rational, and uncoerced consent.
M) Genetic Technology
The responsibility of humankind to God’s creation challenges us to
deal carefully with the possibilities of genetic research and
technology. We welcome the use of genetic technology for meeting
fundamental human needs for health, a safe environment, and an adequate
food supply. We oppose the cloning of humans and the genetic
manipulation of the gender of an unborn child.
Because of the
effects of genetic technologies on all life, we call for effective
guidelines and public accountability to safeguard against any action
that might lead to abuse of these technologies, including political or
military ends. We recognize that cautious, well-intended use of genetic
technologies may sometimes lead to unanticipated harmful consequences.
Human
gene therapies that produce changes that cannot be passed to offspring
(somatic therapy) should be limited to the alleviation of suffering
caused by disease. Genetic therapies for eugenic choices or that produce
waste embryos are deplored. Genetic data of individuals and their
families should be kept secret and held in strict confidence unless
confidentiality is waived by the individual or by his or her family, or
unless the collection and use of genetic identification data is
supported by an appropriate court order. Because its long-term effects
are uncertain, we oppose genetic therapy that results in changes that
can be passed to offspring (germ-line therapy).
N) Rural Life
We support the right of persons and families to live and prosper as
farmers, farm workers, merchants, professionals, and others outside of
the cities and metropolitan centers. We believe our culture is
impoverished and our people deprived of a meaningful way of life when
rural and small-town living becomes difficult or impossible. We
recognize that the improvement of this way of life may sometimes
necessitate the use of some lands for nonagricultural purposes. We
oppose the indiscriminate diversion of agricultural land for
nonagricultural uses when nonagricultural land is available. Further, we
encourage the preservation of appropriate lands for agriculture and
open space uses through thoughtful land use programs. We support
governmental and private programs designed to benefit the resident
farmer rather than the factory farm and programs that encourage industry
to locate in nonurban areas.
We further recognize that increased
mobility and technology have brought a mixture of people, religions, and
philosophies to rural communities that were once homogeneous. While
often this is seen as a threat to or loss of community life, we
understand it as an opportunity to uphold the biblical call to community
for all persons. Therefore, we encourage rural communities and
individuals to maintain a strong connection to the earth and to be open
to: offering mutual belonging, caring, healing, and growth; sharing and
celebrating cooperative leadership and diverse gifts; supporting mutual
trust; and affirming individuals as unique persons of worth, and thus to
practice shalom.
O) Sustainable Agriculture
A prerequisite for meeting the nutritional needs of the world’s
population is an agricultural system which uses sustainable methods,
respects ecosystems, and promotes a livelihood for people that work the
land.
We support a sustainable agricultural system that will
maintain and support the natural fertility of agricultural soil, promote
the diversity of flora and fauna, and adapt to regional conditions and
structures—a system where agricultural animals are treated humanely and
where their living conditions are as close to natural systems as
possible. We aspire to an effective agricultural system where plant,
livestock, and poultry production maintains the natural ecological
cycles, conserves energy, and reduces chemical input to a minimum.
Sustainable
agriculture requires a global evaluation of the impact of agriculture
on food and raw material production, the preservation of animal breeds
and plant varieties, and the preservation and development of the
cultivated landscape.
World trade of agricultural products needs
to be based on fair trade and prices, based on the costs of sustainable
production methods, and must consider the real costs of ecological
damage. The needed technological and biological developments are those
that support sustainability and consider ecological consequences.
P) Urban-Suburban Life
Urban–suburban living has become a dominant style of life for
more and more persons. For many it furnishes economic, educational,
social, and cultural opportunities. For others, it has brought
alienation, poverty, and depersonalization.
We in the Church have
an opportunity and responsibility to help shape the future of
urban-suburban life. Massive programs of renewal and social planning are
needed to bring a greater degree of humanization into urban–suburban
lifestyles.
Christians must judge all programs, including
economic and community development, new towns, and urban renewal, by the
extent to which they protect and enhance human values, permit personal
and political involvement, and make possible neighborhoods open to
persons of all races, ages, and income levels. We affirm the efforts of
all developers who place human values at the heart of their planning.
We
must help shape urban–suburban development so that it provides for the
human need to identify with and find meaning in smaller social
communities.
At the same time, such smaller communities must be
encouraged to assume responsibilities for the total urban–suburban
community instead of isolating themselves from it.
Q) Media Violence and Christian Values
The unprecedented impact the media (principally television and movies)
are having on Christian and human values within our society becomes more
apparent each day. We express disdain at current media preoccupation
with dehumanizing portrayals, sensationalized through mass media
"entertainment" and "news." These practices degrade humankind and
violate the teachings of Christ and the Bible.
United
Methodists, along with those of other faith groups, must be made aware
that the mass media often undermine the truths of Christianity by
promoting permissive lifestyles and detailing acts of graphic violence.
Instead of encouraging, motivating, and inspiring its audiences to adopt
lifestyles based on the sanctity of life, the entertainment industry
often advocates the opposite, painting a cynical picture of violence,
abuse, greed, profanity, and a constant denigration of the family. The
media must be held accountable for the part they play in the decline of
values we observe in society today. Many in the media remain aloof to
the issue, claiming to reflect rather than to influence society. For the
sake of our human family, Christians must work together to halt this
erosion of moral and ethical values in the world community by:
1)
encouraging local congregations to support and encourage parental
responsibility to monitor their children’s viewing and listening habits
on TV, movies, radio and the Internet,
2) encouraging local
congregations, parents and individuals to express their opposition to
the gratuitous portrayal of violent and sexually indecent shows by
writing to the stations that air them and the companies that sponsor
them,
3) encouraging individuals to express their opposition to
the corporate sponsors of these shows by the selection and purchase of
alternate products.
R) Information Communication Technology
Because
effective personal communication is key to being a responsible and
empowered member of society, and because of the power afforded by
information communication technologies to shape society and enable
individuals to participate more fully, we believe that access to these
technologies is a basic right.
Information communication
technologies provide us with information, entertainment, and a voice in
society. They can be used to enhance our quality of life and provide us
with a means to interact with each other, our government, and people and
cultures all over the world. Most information about world events comes
to us by the broadcast, cable, print media, and the Internet.
Concentrating the control of media to large commercial interests limits
our choices and often provides a distorted view of human values.
Therefore, we support the regulation of media communication technologies
to ensure a variety of independent information sources and provides for
the public good.
Personal communication technologies such as the
Internet allow persons to communicate with each other and access vast
information resources that can have commercial, cultural, political, and
personal value. While the Internet can be used to nurture minds and
spirits of children and adults, it is in danger of being overrun with
commercial interests and is used by some to distribute inappropriate and
illegal material. Therefore, the Internet must be managed responsibly
in order to maximize its benefits while minimizing its risks, especially
for children. Denying access in today's world to basic information
communication technologies like the Internet due to their cost or
availability, limits people's participation in their government and
society. We support the goal of universal access to telephone and
Internet services at an affordable price.
S) Persons Living with HIV and Aids
Persons diagnosed as positive for Human Immune Virus (HIV) and with
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) often face rejection from
their families and friends and various communities in which they work
and interact. In addition, they are often faced with a lack of adequate
health care, especially toward the end of life.
All individuals living with HIV and AIDS should be treated with dignity and respect.
We
affirm the responsibility of the Church to minister to and with these
individuals and their families regardless of how the disease was
contracted. We support their rights to employment, appropriate medical
care, full participation in public education, and full participation in
the Church.
We urge the Church to be actively involved in the
prevention of the spread of AIDS by providing educational opportunities
to the congregation and the community. The Church should be available to
provide counseling to the affected individuals and their families.
T) Right to Health Care
Health is a condition of physical, mental, social, and spiritual
well-being, and we view it as a responsibility—public and private.
Health care is a basic human right. Psalm 146 speaks of the God “who
executes justice for the oppressed;/ who gives food to the hungry./ The
LORD sets the prisoners free;/ the LORD opens the eyes of the blind.”
The right to health care includes care for persons with brain diseases,
neurological conditions or physical disabilities, who must be afforded
the same access to health care as all other persons in our communities.
It is unjust to construct or perpetuate barriers to physical or mental
wholeness or full participation in community.
We encourage
individuals to pursue a healthy lifestyle and affirm the importance of
preventive health care, health education, environmental and occupational
safety, good nutrition, and secure affordable housing in achieving
health. We also recognize the role of governments in ensuring that each
individual has access to those elements necessary to good health.
Countries facing a public health crisis such as HIV/AIDS must have
access to generic medicines and to patented medicines without infringing
on a pharmaceutical company's patent/licensing rights. We affirm the
right of men and women to have access to comprehensive reproductive
health/family planning information and services which will serve as a
means to prevent unplanned pregnancies, reduce abortions and prevent the
spread of HIV/AIDS.
U) Organ Transplantation and Donation
We believe that organ transplantation and organ donation are acts of charity, agape
love, and self-sacrifice. We recognize the life-giving benefits of
organ and other tissue donation and encourage all people of faith to
become organ and tissue donors as a part of their love and ministry to
others in need.
We urge that it be done in an environment of
respect for deceased and living donors and for the benefit of the
recipients, and following protocols that carefully prevent abuse to
donors and their families.
WELCOMING STATEMENT
MICAH 6:8 SUNDAY SMALL GROUP
"He has told you, O man, what is good; And what
does the LORD require of you but to do justice, to
love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?"
The Micah 6:8 Class is a community in which we seek to Open:
Our Hearts to each other;
Our Minds to truth; and
Our Doors to everyone.
OPEN HEARTS
We believe that the love of Christ has the power to open every heart to every possibility.
OPEN MINDS
We believe that open minds are made possible by the love of Christ having first opened our hearts. We strive to keep our minds open to the truths that can be learned through scripture, tradition, experience and reason. Open Hearts and Open Minds can keep us open to all the sources from which truth can be made evident.
OPEN DOORS
Open hearts cause us to want to open doors to all whom we love. Open Minds cause us to reject the artificial distinctions which closed hearts erect among the children of God. We pledge to keep our doors open to all who would seek to love God and their neighbor.
WELCOME
The doors to our community are open without regard to race or national origin, age, health or infirmity, sexual orientation or gender identity, marital status or economic condition. We feel ourselves to be immeasurably enriched by all who bring their open hearts and open minds to our fellowship.
"He has told you, O man, what is good; And what
does the LORD require of you but to do justice, to
love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?"
The Micah 6:8 Class is a community in which we seek to Open:
Our Hearts to each other;
Our Minds to truth; and
Our Doors to everyone.
OPEN HEARTS
We believe that the love of Christ has the power to open every heart to every possibility.
OPEN MINDS
We believe that open minds are made possible by the love of Christ having first opened our hearts. We strive to keep our minds open to the truths that can be learned through scripture, tradition, experience and reason. Open Hearts and Open Minds can keep us open to all the sources from which truth can be made evident.
OPEN DOORS
Open hearts cause us to want to open doors to all whom we love. Open Minds cause us to reject the artificial distinctions which closed hearts erect among the children of God. We pledge to keep our doors open to all who would seek to love God and their neighbor.
WELCOME
The doors to our community are open without regard to race or national origin, age, health or infirmity, sexual orientation or gender identity, marital status or economic condition. We feel ourselves to be immeasurably enriched by all who bring their open hearts and open minds to our fellowship.
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