Posts Tagged ‘Common Ground’

Matthew 25 Network Statement on the Assassination of George Tiller

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

The Matthew 25 Network is saddened, shocked, and outraged by the assassination of George Tiller as he attended church on Pentecost Sunday, May 31, 2009. Though our membership has a diversity of opinions on the question of abortion, we all agree that violence in the name of any political cause is absolutely unacceptable, and that Dr. Tiller’s assassination was an unequivocally evil act.

Our sincerest prayers go out to Dr. Tiller’s family and friends, as well as to his church family, whose memories of Pentecost Sunday 2009 will be forever marred by this act of heinous violence that happened in their midst. We pray that the God of comfort bring them blessing and hope in a time of deep trial and trauma.

As more information comes out about this disgusting act, it is becoming more and more apparent that verbal violence, the demonization of those on the other side of an incredibly emotional and volatile issue, was a major contributing factor in Dr. Tiller’s assassination.

This assassination should serve as a wake-up call, a clear indication that violent language leads to violent deeds and a clear invitation to all of us to speak and act in good faith and try to find common-ground solutions to our problems. We hope that our brothers and sisters on both sides of this issue will come together with us not only in condemning this act and all acts of terrorism, but also in striving to find common ground and a better way of talking about this issue, in order to ensure that acts of violence like this never happen again.

President Obama Speaks at Notre Dame

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

Today, amid a great deal of controversy, President Obama delivered the commencement address at the University of Notre Dame. As a rhetorical scholar, I’m very impressed (but not all that surprised!) by the way President Obama used the controversy and the public attention surrounding his visit to motivate his speech and call for common ground; I can’t help but think that that part of his speech is about as good a mission statement for the growing Christian progressive movement as we can find.

We’d also like to congratulate and express our gratitude to our friends at Catholics United and Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good for their tireless work on behalf of common ground and dialogue, in providing a space for people to express their support for Notre Dame President Fr. John Jenkins and his choice to invite President Obama to deliver this year’s commencement.

Finally, we’d like to congratulate Notre Dame’s class of 2009 – and all this year’s graduates – on their degrees. The young are this nation’s most valuable resource; young Christians are the vanguard of changing the religious conversation in this country to a more progressive one. Congrats… now go out and change the world.

Part 1:

Parts 2-4, and a transcript, after the jump:
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