IRS v. UCC

You may have heard by now that the IRS is investigation the UCC (and threatening loss of tax exempt status) because of the speech that Sen. Obama gave at last year’s General Synod in Hartford, CT. There has been plenty of coverage, so I won’t rehash too much of it, but it still seems an awful lot like it is politically motivated (whether by more fundamentalist members of the UCC as has been rumored or by someone out to embarrass Sen. Obama remains unclear). The invitation (one of dozens of speakers including Bill Moyers and Lynn Redgrave) was to a UCC member to discuss how his faith affected his life in politics. The invitation was extended before he became a presidential candidate and the leaders at Synod went out of there way to make sure that there was no campaigning allowed and didn’t come close to an endorsement, so it is hard to see how they could have violated the tax exempt status. Regardless, after 7 months (and coincidentally just before the Ohio primary?), the IRS makes it public that they are investigating. While they probably have an obligation to investigate to avoid the appearance of impropriety, the facts here would seem so overwhelming that they ought to quickly end the investigation by finding that the denomination did nothing wrong. The facts are so overwhelming that a prestigious Washington, DC law firm has agreed to take the case on for free and the lead is a former Solicitor General of the United States who (I believe) has never lost a case before the US Supreme Court. Sigh….

Some random thoughts

It has been a while since my last entry. I’ve just been busy. Erin’s season ended with a heartbreaking 3 point loss to UC-Clermont in the ORCC semifinals. OU-L led most of the game (by as many as 10 in the second half), but some questionable officiating late and just not hitting some of their late shots cost them. It was a disappointing ending, but they had a pretty good season (18-14 or something like that)

Ohio got a lot of attention due to the tight Democratic race for President. I was actually kind of hoping that this past Tuesday would put an end to it until the conventions because, frankly, I’m tired of it. Alas, that was not to be, but at least I won’t get all those automated calls in my answering machine (at least until Oct).

The Buckeyes men’s basketball team got the win they needed to keep any hope of an NCAA bid alive when the upset #15 Purdue in overtime on Tuesday. Now they need to do the same to Michigan State and get a win in the Big Ten tournament or they’ll be going to the NIT.

They’re calling for the biggest storm since 1993 (I honestly don’t remember a bad storm in 1993, but that’s what they said on TV this evening) in the next 2 days. We’ve been getting hit with storms every Tuesday and Friday for the last 2 months, but they’re talking about 5-12″ out of this one. I don’t mind, I love snow.

Thoughts from a middle-aged middle-class guy

I read two interesting posts on the God’s Politics blog today that got me thinking and I wanted to put some of those thoughts down in writing, but I may not be able to do them justice in such a short time. The first post was this one by Tony Jones. I have to say that a great deal of what is coming from the “emergent” community resonates with me. Anyway, I agree that

Carried into the modern world by the French and American revolutions, individual rights became the foundation of liberal democracy, clearly the most robust and equitable of all systems of government yet conceived. And although it happened more slowly than many people would have liked, the concept of individual rights brought about great goods like ending government-backed slavery, women’s suffrage, and the civil rights movement.

But as he points out, it goes further than that. We who call ourselves Christians are called to go further than be concerned with our own individual rights, we are called to be concerned with the individual rights of others. Part of me thinks that is easier for a middle-aged (or approaching it) middle-class guy like me who isn’t worried about if I’ll have anything to eat tonight or whether my kids have jackets and socks and underwear and a roof over their heads. On the other hand, I’m constantly reminded of those who have practically nothing who still seem to find it in their hearts to be more concerned about others than themselves. I wonder if I could do the same. I’d like to think so, but I honestly don’t know. Sherry just got back from El Salvador and the stories she tells of the people they worked with there (and in Ukraine where she is going again in April) are gut-wrenching. The stories she tells of some of the people who went down to “help” are sickening (maybe I’ll expound on that later). Anyway, I’ll be interested to see what he says in part 2.

The second article was this one by Becky Garrison. She writes about discovering she is directly descended from Rev. Roger Williams who founded Rhode Island. He had some very strong views on the separation of church and state based on the very real persecution that he was fleeing. As far as her question about whether religious leaders should be endorsing candidates, they are human beings, too. As individuals they have every right to support the candidate of their choice, but as she points out, they must be careful not to become “political pawns.” To borrow a phrase from the Quakers (see also this) religious leaders have an obligation to “speak truth to power.” When they cease to be able to take their chosen leader to task for his/her failure to do the right thing (like torturing prisoners to name just one example), then they lose their moral authority. The other extreme though, and something that bothers me a little about this year’s election, is the apparent requirement that candidates have to have some strongly held religious beliefs. While I don’t think that is necessarily a detriment, it also certainly isn’t a requirement to be able to govern and I’d rather the politicians be going to church for reasons other than political expediency.

The US has lost all moral authority

This makes me embarrassed to be an American. The CIA director just admitted in testimony before Congress that the CIA did waterboard some detainees (remember, they aren’t prisoners). Now the White House press secretary says we could do it again. I’m waiting to hear John McCain to respond to this. As a former prisoner-of-war, I’d expect him to come out strongly against this. He, better than just about anyone on the national scene, should be able to tell you that (episodes of 24 not withstanding) when you torture prisoners, the information you get (I won’t call it intelligence) is worth almost nothing. They’ll tell you anything just to get you to stop. I could go on, but it was covered better than I could ever do it here and here. I especially liked the last paragraph of that first story:

Alexis de Tocqueville, the French historian, politicist, and observer of 19th century America, observed that “America is great because America is good. If America ceases to be good, America will cease to be great.” It is important for people of faith to impress upon Americans and our leaders in Washington that America’s goodness, and hence its greatness, is seriously compromised by the practice of torture, or cruel, inhuman and degrading treatments of detainees.

As the LA Times pointed out, Congress has twice passed laws requiring the military and the CIA to obey the Geneva Convention, but the White House (and the apparently spineless Attorney General) continue to be unable to see what the rest of the world knows…

I like this guy

I was browsing some of the blogs I follow and today came across two posts that I enjoyed from a Disciples of Christ pastor in St. Joseph, MO. The first one was an interesting look at Lent from someone who didn’t observe it growing up, and only discovered it in seminary. As a UCC PK, I’ve known what Lent was for as long as I can remember, but that doesn’t mean that I always take it all that seriously (hey, I’m human), but this did get me to stop and think for a moment. This year, I’ll try to be more serious about my observance of it. The second one was about the movie Juno which I haven’t seen yet, but probably will. By most accounts it seems to be a good movie, though in the last day or two, all of the sudden I’m seeing arguments on whether the movie is “pro-life” or “pro-choice” or whether Hollywood is selling out to the “Religious Right” (as if they’d have each other), give me a break. I couldn’t help but chuckle at this passage on abortion though (as it largely describes my feelings, though obvious the particulars are his — and in case you’re counting there are at least 5 hands there).

I feel more than a bit conflicted about it. On the one hand, I’m a card-carrying liberal with a lot of white male guilt, so the last thing I want to do is tell a woman what to do with her body. On the other hand, I’m a father, because two women felt very strongly that abortion was wrong for them and made an adoption plan instead. On the other hand, that was their choice and who am I to say what is the right choice for someone else when it comes to such a personal and painful issue? On the other hand, even if I remain unconvinced that life begins at conception or even the first trimester or even beyond that–I’m not sure when it begins, I still believe the potential for life is there. I’ve counseled couples who grieved over a miscarriage and that grief was real–we did not have a funeral but we did grieve together. On the other hand, so many anti-abortion people are just so arrogant and mean and ridiculous–you want to stop abortion but you’re against sex education and birth control! What’s up with that? I could go on.


Oh, and finally, I was also amused by a story in today’s Columbus Dispatch about the problems being caused by the fact that St. Patrick’s Day falls during Holy Week this year (drinking your green beer to excess doesn’t exactly seem appropriate during Holy Week).

Martin Luther King, Jr Day

I was only 6 when Dr. King was assassinated, I remember the TV coverage very well. I knew of him, but I didn’t really understand what he was all about at the time. It was in the mid-70s that I finally read about him and Gandhi and really came to appreciate what he stood for. Today is the holiday celebrating his birth/life/legacy and to remember that there is still work to be done. Pastor Bob Cornwall has two excellent stories up on his blog today. The first talks about a sermon Dr. King gave a month before his death entitled Unfulfilled Dreams. The second one discusses remarks that Barak Obama made yesterday at Ebeneezer Baptist Church in Atlanta (Dr. King’s former church). I especially appreciate the second quoted passage. I am so sick of all the negativity and mud-slinging in politics today. All these politicians who claim to be Christian/religious don’t seem to remember the Golden Rule, do they? I sometimes yearn for a parliamentary system where the legislature can be dissolved and new elections called in a matter of weeks rather than the current system here in the US where Congrescritters essentially have to start running for reelection before they are even sworn in and the Presidential race lasts 2 years. If more folks running for office felt the way Sen. Obama speaks here, perhaps so many of our young people wouldn’t be disillusioned by the process. Ah, well. I hope you all had a good holiday.

The Middle East

I hesitated a long time before even starting to type this because I really don’t plan for this blog to become too political, but with Shane still in Iraq, these things are on my mind. While I have some theological disagreements with Pastor Nathan, I find myself mostly in agreement with this sermon of his and I appreciated Deanna Mershed’s response. It was also heartening to hear the Israeli Prime Minister last week admit that continuing to expand the “settlements” and otherwise not keeping their agreements wasn’t helping the situation. I fear that it will take generations to rebuild the good will we, as a nation, enjoyed around the world as recently as the immediate aftermath of 2001-09-11. Sigh…

Religious discrimination in the political process

I also came across this item today. With ~80,000 citizens of Nevada identifying themselves as Jewish, you’d think they might have thought this one out a little better. It is particularly disturbing to me that the Republican party official wasn’t even aware of the problem. Have the Republicans completely written off the Jewish community? Do you think they would ever even consider holding the caucuses on Sunday morning at those times? And, of course, no coverage of this in the mainstream media that I can tell.