Home: Justice and Peace: Just Peace Church
Pronouncement on affirming the United Church of Christ as a Just
Peace Church
General Synod 15 pronouncement
85-GS-50 VOTED: The Fifteenth General Synod adopts the pronouncement “Affirming
the United Church of Christ as a Just Peace Church.”
Summary
Affirms the United Church of Christ to be a Just Peace Church and defines Just
Peace as the interrelation of friendship, justice, and common security from violence.
Places the United Church of Christ General Synod in opposition to the institution
of war.
Background
The Thirteenth General Synod called upon the United Church of Christ to become
a Peace Church and the Fourteenth General Synod asked a Peace Theology Development
Team to recommend to the Fifteenth General Synod theology, policy, and structure
for enabling the United Church of Christ to be a peacemaking church. This pronouncement
is based on insights from all three of the historic approaches of Christians to
issues of war and peace—pacifism, just war, and crusade—but attempts
to move beyond these traditions to an understanding rooted in the vision of shalom,
linking peace, and justice. Since Just War criteria itself now rules out war under
modern conditions, it is imperative to move beyond Just War thinking to the Theology
of a Just Peace.
Biblical and theological foundations
A Just Peace is grounded in God’s activity in creation. Creation shows the
desire of God to sustain the world and not destroy. The creation anticipates what
is to come: the history-long relationship between God and humanity and the coming
vision of shalom.
Just Peace is grounded in covenant relationship. God creates and calls us into
covenant, God’s gift of friendship: “I will make a covenant of peace
with them; it shall be an everlasting covenant with them; and I will bless them
and multiply them, and will set my sanctuary in the midst of them for evermore”
(Ezekiel 37:26). When God’s abiding presence is embraced, human well-being
results, or Shalom, which can be translated Just Peace.
A Just Peace is grounded in the reconciling activity of Jesus Christ. Human sin
is the rejection of the covenant of friendship with God and one another and the
creation and perpetuation of structures of evil. Through God’s own suffering
love in the cross, the power of these structures has been broken and the possibility
for relationship restored.
A Just Peace is grounded in the presence of the Holy Spirit. God sends the Holy
Spirit to continue the struggle to overcome the powers ranged against human bonding.
Thus, our hope for a Just Peace does not rest on human efforts alone, but on God’s
promise that we will “have life and have it abundantly” (John 10:10).
A Just Peace is grounded in the community of reconciliation: the Just Peace Church.
Jesus, who is our peace (Ephesians 2:14), performed signs of forgiveness and healing
and made manifest that God’s reign is for those who are in need.The church
is a continuation of that servant manifestation. As a Just Peace Church, we embody
a Christ fully engaged in human events. The church is thus a real countervailing
power to those forces that divide, that perpetuate human enmity and injustice,
and that destroy.
Just Peace is grounded in hope. Shalom is the vision that pulls all creation toward
a time when weapons are swept off the earth and all creatures lie down together
without fear; where all have their own fig tree and dwell secure from want. As
Christians, we offer this conviction to the world: Peace is possible.
Statement of Christian conviction
A. The Fifteenth General Synod affirms a Just Peace as the presence
and interrelation of friendship, justice, and common security from violence. The
General Synod affirms the following as marks of a Just Peace theology:
Peace is possible. A Just Peace is a basic gift of God and is the force and vision
moving human history. The meaning of a Just Peace and God’s activity in
human history, especially the life and witness of Jesus, is understood through
the Bible, church history, and the voices of the oppressed and those in the struggle
for justice and peace. Nonviolent conflict is a normal and healthy reflection
of diversity; working through conflict constructively should lead to growth of
both individuals and nations.
Nonviolence is a Christian response to conflict shown to us by Jesus. We have
barely begun to explore this little known process of reconciliation. Violence
can and must be minimized, even eliminated in most situations. However, because
evil and violence are embedded in human nature and institutions, they will remain
present in some form. War can and must be eliminated.
The State should be based upon participatory consent and should be primarily responsible
for developing justice and well-being, enforcing law, and minimizing violence
in the process.
International structures of friendship, justice, and common security from violence
are necessary and possible at this point in history in order to eliminate the
institution of war and move toward a Just Peace. Unexpected initiatives of friendship
and reconciliation can transform interpersonal and international relationships,
and are essential to restoring community.
B. The Fifteenth General Synod affirms the United Church of Christ
as a Just Peace Church. The General Synod affirms the following as marks of a
Just Peace Church, calling upon each local church to become:
A community of hope, believing a Just Peace is possible, working toward this end,
and communicating to the larger world the excitement and possibility of a Just
Peace.
A community of worship and celebration, centering its identity in justice and
peacemaking and the Good News of peace that is Jesus Christ.
A community of biblical and theological reflection, studying the Scriptures, the
Christian story, and the working of the Spirit in the struggle against injustice
and oppression.
A community of spiritual nurture and support, loving one another and giving one
another strength in the struggle for a Just Peace.
A community of honest and open conflict, a zone of freedom where differences may
be expressed, explored, and worked through in mutual understanding and growth.
A community of empowerment, renewing and training people for making peace/doing
justice.
A community of financial support, developing programs and institutions for a Just
Peace.
A community of solidarity with the poor, seeking to be present in places of oppression,
poverty, and violence, and standing with the oppressed in the struggle to resist
and change this evil.
A community of loyalty to God and to the whole human community over any nation
or rival idolatry.
A community that recognizes no enemies, willing to risk and be vulnerable, willing
to take surprising initiatives to transform situations of enmity. A community
of repentance, confessing its own guilt and involvement in structural injustice
and violence, ready to acknowledge its entanglement in evil, seeking to turn toward
new life.
A community of resistance, standing against social structures comfortable with
violence and injustice.
A community of sacrifice and commitment, ready to go the extra mile, and then
another mile, in the search for justice and peace.
A community of political and social engagement, in regular dialogue with the political
order, participating in peace and justice advocacy networks, witnessing to a Just
Peace in the community and in the nation, joining the social and political struggle
to implement a Just Peace.
C. The Fifteenth General Synod affirms friendship as essential
to a Just Peace.
1. We affirm the unity of the whole human community and oppose any use of nationalism
to divide this covenant of friendship.
2. We reject all labeling of others as enemies and the creation of institutions
that perpetuate enemy relations.
3. We affirm diversity among peoples and nations and the growth and change that
can emerge from the interchange of differing value systems, ideologies, religions
and political and economic systems.
4. We affirm nonviolent conflict as inevitable and valuable, an expression of
diversity and essential to healthy relationships among people and nations.
5. We affirm all nations developing global community and interchange, including:
a. freedom of travel,b. free exchange of ideas and open dialogue,c. scientific,
cultural, and religious exchanges,d. public education that portrays other nations
fairly ,breaking down enemy stereotypes and images, and. knowledge of foreign
languages.
D. The Fifteenth General Synod affirms justice as essential to
a Just Peace.
1. We affirm all nations working together to insure that people everywhere will
be able to meet their basic needs, including the right of every person to:
a. food and clean water, b. adequate health care, c. decent housing, d. meaningful
employment, e. basic education, f. participation in community decision-making
and the political process, g. freedom of worship and religious expression, h.
protection from torture, and i. protection of rights without regard to race, gender,
sexual orientation, religion, or national or social origin.
2. We affirm the establishment of a more just international order in which:
a. trade barriers, tariffs, and debt burdens do not work against the interests
of poor people, and developing nations, b. poor nations have a greater share in
the policies and management of global economic institutions.
3. We affirm economic policies that target aid to the most needy: the rural poor,
women, nations with poor natural resources or structural problems, and the poor
within each nation.
4. We affirm economic policies that will further the interests of the poor within
each nation:
a. promoting popular participation, b. empowering the poor to make effective demand
on social systems, c. encouraging decentralization and greater community control,
d. providing for the participation of women in development, e. redistributing
existing assets, including land, and distributing more equitably future benefits
of growth, f. reducing current concentrations of economic and political power,
and g. providing for self-reliant development, particularly in food production.
5. We affirm nations transferring funds from military expenditures into programs
that will aid the poor and developing strategies of converting military industries
to Just Peace industries.
6. We oppose the injustices resulting from the development of national security
states that currently repress the poor in organizing society against an external
enemy.
7. We affirm a free and open press within each nation, without hindrance from
government.
E. The Fifteenth General Synod affirms common security from violence
as essential to a Just Peace.
1. We affirm that national security includes four interrelated components:
a. provision for general well-being, b. cultivation of justice, c. provision for
defense of a nation, and d. creation of political atmosphere and structure in
which a Just Peace can flourish and the risk of war is diminished or eliminated.
2. We affirm the right and obligation of governments to use civil authority to
prevent lawlessness and protect human rights. Such force must not be excessive
and must always be in the context of the primary responsibility of the state in
creating social justice and promoting human welfare. Any use of force must be
based in the participatory consent of the people.
3. We affirm that war must be eliminated as an instrument of national policy and
the global economy must be more just. To meet these goals, international institutions
must be strengthened.
4. We affirm our support for the United Nations, which should be strengthened
developing the following:
a. more authority in disputes among countries, b. peacekeeping forces, including
a permanent force of at least 5000, able to police border disputes and intervene
when called to do so by the U.N., c. peacemaking teams, trained in mediation,
conflict intervention, and conflict resolution, d. support for international peace
academies, e. a global satellite surveillance system to provide military intelligence
to the common community, f. international agreements to limit military establishments
and the international arms trade, g. an international ban on the development,
testing, use, and possession of nuclear and bio-chemical weapons of mass destruction,
and h. an international ban on all weapons in space and all national development
of space-based defense systems and Strategic Defense Initiatives.
5. We affirm our support for the International Court of Justice and for the strengthening
of international law, including:
a. the Law of the Sea Treaty, b. universal ratification of the International Covenants
and Conventions which seek to implement the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
and c. recognition of the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice and
removal of restrictions, such as the Connally Amendment, which impair the Court’s
effective functioning.
6. We reject any use or threat to use weapons and forces of mass destruction and
any doctrine of deterrence based primarily on using such weapons. We also reject
unilateral, full-scale disarmament as a currently accepted path out of the present
international dilemma. We affirm the development of new policies of common security,
using a combination of negotiated agreements, new international institutions and
institutional power, nonviolent strategies, unilateral initiatives to lessen tensions,
and new policies that will make the global economy more just.
7. We affirm the mutual and verifiable freeze on the testing, production, and
deployment of nuclear weapons as the most important step in breaking the escalating
dynamics of the arms race and call upon the United States, the U.S.S.R., and other
nations to take unilateral initiatives toward implementing such a freeze, contingent
on the other side responding, until such time as a comprehensive freeze can be
negotiated.
8. We declare our opposition to all weapons of mass destruction. All nations should:
a. declare that they will never use such weapons, b. cease immediately the testing,
production, and deployment of nuclear weapons, c. begin dismantling these arsenals,
and d. while the process of dismantling is going on, negotiate comprehensive treaties
banning all such future weapons by any nation.
9. We declare our opposition to war, violence, and terrorism. All nations should:
a. declare that they will never attack another nation, b. make unilateral initiatives
toward dismantling their military arsenals, calling on other nations to reciprocate,
and c. develop mechanisms for international law, international peacekeeping, and
international conflict resolution.
Address by Rev. Allan Boesak
President Avery Post introduced Rev. Allan Boesak, President of the World Alliance
of Reformed Churches, who addressed the General Synod.(See Appendix 14.)
President Post then called on Rev. Charles Cobb to lead General Synod in prayer.
Proposal for action on organizing the United Church of Christ as a Just Peace
church
The Assistant Moderator, Ms. Janeece L. Dent, called on Rev. Virginia Derr, who
moved the Proposal for Action, “Organizing the United Church of Christ as
a Just Peace Church” with additions as follows:
Section IV,I,add after first paragraph:
“We commend to all local churches the use of the World Peace Prayer, using
the example of the Benedictine Sisters who pray this specific prayer each day
at 12 noon:
Lead me/us from death to life, from falsehood to truth. Lead me/us from despair
to hope, from fear to trust. Lead me/us from hate to love, from war to peace.
Let peace fill our heart, our world, our universe.”
Section IV, 4, paragraph 2, after first sentence add following sentence:
“We call upon local churches to be understanding and even supportive of
persons who out of individual conscience take the responsibility for such non-violent
extraordinary witness.”
After discussion, Rev. Ross McGuire moved an amendment as follows:
Reword IV,4,paragraph 2 to read:
“While respecting the claims of responsible governments on the loyalty and
good will of their people, because the times are now so critical, we call our
churches to recognize and support the right of persons to witness in extraordinary
as well as ordinary ways for a just peace.
“Such a witness may include acts of non-violent challenge to laws and policies
which promote war and injustice in the world and a willingness to go to jail to
call attention to specific outrages.”
Following discussion, the motion was defeated.
Mr.Jeffrey Schragg of the Business Committee moved to divide the question, separating
Section VI, “Call for Increased Funding, “All Church Offerings, from
the proposal for action so that it could be considered during the report of Committee
13. The motion was adopted.
After further discussion, it was, 85-GS-51 VOTED: The Fifteenth General Synod
adopts the Proposal for Action “Organizing the United Church of Christ as
a Just Peace Church.”
Summary
Calls upon churches to organize themselves so as to be effective instruments of
God’s Just Peace. Calls for organizing the United Church of Christ regionally
and nationally for more effective Just Peace witness. Calls for a two-year Just
Peace offering and effective long-range funding.
Background
This Proposal for Action builds on the proposed pronouncement, also submitted
to the Fifteenth General Synod, “Affirming the United Church of Christ as
a Just Peace Church.” Like the pronouncement, the Proposal for Action has
been developed in response to the request of the Fourteenth General Synod to recommend
theology, policy, and structure for enabling the United Church of Christ to be
a peace-making church.
Directional statement
The Fifteenth General Synod calls on all in the United Church of Christ to recognize
that the creating of a Just Peace is central to their identity as Christians and
to their Baptism into the Christian community.
A. Call To Local Churches
The Fifteenth General Synod calls on local churches to organize their common life
so as to make a difference in the achieving of a Just Peace and the ending of
the institution of war.
The Fifteenth General Synod calls for the development of four key components within
local churches: spiritual development, Just Peace education, political advocacy,
and community witness.
1. We call all local churches to the inward journey of spiritual nurture: prayer
for a Just Peace, study of the Scriptures, theological reflection upon the work
of the Holy Spirit, and celebration and worship that center the life of the community
in the power and reality of the God who creates a Just Peace. We call for the
development of Christian community that nurtures and supports members in the search
for a Just Peace. We commend to all local churches the use of the World Peace
Prayer, using the example of the Benedictine Sisters who pray this specific prayer
each day at 12 noon:
Lead me/us from death to life, from falsehood to truth. Lead me/us from despair
to hope, from fear to trust. Lead me/us from hate to love, from war to peace.
Let peace fill our hearts, our world, our universe.
2. We call all local churches to the inward journey of education. Knowing that
there are no easy answers to the creating of a Just Peace, we call for churches
to establish the climate where all points of view can be respected and all honest
feelings and opinions shared in the search for new answers and directions. We
call for a steady program of Just Peace education and a steady flow of information
on Just Peace issues into the life of the congregation.
3. We call all local churches to the outward journey of political witness, enabling
all members to join the search for the politics of a Just Peace. Just Peace is
both a religious concept and a political concept, and participation in the political
arena is essential. We call for each church to appoint a contact person for the
United Church of Christ Peace Advocacy and Hunger/Economic Justice Networks to
follow closely those political issues most critical to the development of a Just
Peace and to alert members of the local church when it is most appropriate to
write or contact their Senators and Representatives.
4. We call all local churches to the outward journey of community witness. We
call for local churches to make their convictions known in their communities through
public forums, media, and presence in the public arena. We call for local churches
to help shape public opinion and the climate in which the issues of a Just Peace
are shaped. We call for churches to explore with military industries the opportunities
for conversion into Just Peace industries. We call for evangelistic outreach,
inviting others to join in the search for a Just Peace.
Because the times are so critical, we call for extraordinary witness as well as
ordinary political involvement to break the power of the structural evils that
prevent a Just Peace. We call upon local churches to be understanding and even
supportive of persons who out of individual conscience take the responsibility
for such nonviolent extraordinary witness. Examples of such witness might include:
becoming a conscientious objector to war; refusing acceptance of employment with
any project related to nuclear and biochemical weapons and warfare; refusing any
and all assignments to use weapons of mass destruction as a member of the military;
withholding tax money in protest of the excessively militaristic policies of our
government; and engaging in acts of non- violent civil disobedience, willingly
going to jail to call attention to specific outrages.
B. Call to Conferences and National Bodies
The Fifteenth General Synod calls upon Conferences and national bodies of the
United Church of Christ to organize their common life so as to make a difference
in the achieving of a Just Peace and the ending of the institution of war.
The Fifteenth General Synod calls for the development of four key components in
developing the United Church of Christ so that it can make a real difference over
the next years: regional centers, Washington advocacy, international presence,
and national programs.
1. We call upon Conferences to develop regional centers able to link local churches
into effective regional and national strategies. A variety of options are possible
at the Association and Conference levels:
The development of regional United Church of Christ peace centers that resource
local groups through educational, organizational, advocacy, and funding efforts;
The development of ecumenical regional Just Peace centers, in partnership with
other denominations;
The funding of part-time, contract, or full-time Just Peace staff at the Association
or Conference; and
The funding of ecumenical peace staff in states or metropolitan areas.
2. We call for the strengthening of our advocacy work in Washington, D.C., with
more funding to develop the capacity of the United Church of Christ to make its
witness known in the national political arena, to expand its capacity for policy
analysis, to increase its presence on Capitol Hill in shaping legislation, to
develop stronger communication links with churches around the country to share
political developments and urge action, and to build coalitions.
3. We call upon the United Church of Christ Board for World Ministries to explore
and develop new models of peace and justice ministries globally to address particular
situations of injustice, oppression, and real or potential violence, and to develop
communication links between Christians in these critical situations and Christians
in the United States, developing global partnership and global awareness in the
search for a Just Peace.
4. We call upon all national bodies to continue to develop effective programs
of advocacy, empowerment, and education. We call for more resources to develop
national strategies of advocacy and action to increase the witness of the United
Church of Christ for a Just Peace. We call for the Office for Church in Society
to facilitate the coordination of this work.
Implementation
Churches, Conferences, and national bodies, including the Office for Church in
Society, the Executive Council, the United Church Board for World Ministries,
and the Stewardship Council, have been requested in this Call to Action to respond
to various directions. These bodies are responsible for developing the strategies
and programs to fulfill the goals outlined here.
Note: Implementation of this Proposal for action is subject to the availability
of funds.