Almost
100 leaders of the nation’s largest and most influential Christian
congregations, calling themselves the “Circle of Protection,” urge Congress and
the President to resist “budget cuts that undermine the lives, dignity and
rights of poor and vulnerable people.”
Their
concern reflects a Norman Rockwell America that still exists somewhere under
today’s layers of sound-bite meanness and cynicism, when “love thy neighbor as
thyself” could be heard from pulpits.
As
the White House warns of how the sequester would cut airport security, teaching
jobs and vaccines for children, Republicans keep digging in to avoid taxes on corporations
and the richest Americans.
In a
reversal of traditional clichés, more realism can be heard inside church walls
than in the halls of Congress as Protestant leaders proclaim:
“Important
choices must be made: we must weigh the benefits of tax credits for low-income
people and tax breaks for high-income people; of nutrition assistance to
low-income families and subsidies to agricultural businesses...
“Congress
can and must develop a balanced and thoughtful path forward that protects the
most vulnerable and preserves economic opportunity.”
For
those who respect the faith of religious Americans even though they do not
share it, this effort to unsequester their traditional moral beliefs is a
heartening sign of sanity.
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