The Fig Tree stories of people putting their faith
into action
in the Northwest

Updated
10/5/05

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Initiative Education Forums sponsored by the Interfaith Council and Catholic Charities will be held at 7 p.m. the following dates and places:

• Thursday, Oct. 20, at St. Mark’s Lutheran Church at 316 E. 24th Ave. in South Spokane;

• Monday, Oct. 25, at St. John Vianney Catholic at 503 N. Walnut in Spokane Valley;

• Wednesday, Oct. 27, at Country Homes Christian at 8415 N. Wall in the Spokane area, and

• Tuesday, Oct. 26, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 440 NE Ash in Pullman.

Presenters will explain initiatives and analyze them from various religious perspectives.  They will not support either side, but will share resources so voters can make informed decisions.

Ballot issues include I-330 and I-336, which deal with medical lawsuits; I-900, which requires the state auditor to do performance reviews with 16 percent of the state’s portion of sales taxes; I-901, which would expand smoking prohibitions in public places, and I-912, which would repeal the recent gas tax passed by the legislature.

For information, call 329-1410 or email laura@interfaithnw.org.



Religion and politics are dinner discussion topics for advocate's family

Returning to Spokane after studies in history and religion at Mt. Holyoke College in Massachusetts, 22 year-old Laura Jennison found a job that fits her interests.

She is the new coordinator for the Interfaith Council’s Advocacy Action Network of the Inland Northwest.

In that role, she is preparing four Initiative Education Forums to inform voters in churches about five initiatives on the ballot for the election on Tuesday, Nov. 8.

In Laura’s family, religion and politics have been everyday discussion topics, so she speaks with ease about the intersection of these issues.

“When state or national legislation affects people in poverty, people without health care and people living in inadequate housing, people of faith care,” she said.

Her job is to inform people, so they can talk to or write their representatives to tell them how they feel on issues because of their faith.

“Part of my role is to remind people of faith that it is our responsibility to care,” Laura said.

Along with the forums, she meets with congregations to do advocacy training, educate them on issues, and remind them “why we as people of faith care about these issues.”

She knows it’s easy for them to lose sight of their responsibility.

“The talk of separation of church and state, which is important, often means that people of faith do not bring their faith values into the public square and do not work for issues of concern,” she said.  “Often they separate what they learn and do in worship from what they do in relationship with the government.  Many see church as a private sphere, separate from the public sphere, limited to personal relationships.

“We lose sight of the role of the congregations as communities involved in the public process to help people who are poor or hungry.  Many will help people through church or nonprofit agencies, but few want to deal with the systemic changes, so people can provide food for their families on their own,” said Laura, a member of North Hill Christian Church.

“I don’t expect that vast, sweeping change will happen quickly to help people move from poverty and live on their own as they want.  People who work full-time at minimum-wage jobs cannot work their way out of poverty. People should be able to support themselves and their families without having to work 60 to 80 hours in two or three jobs.  Even working that much, many still do not have health care.”

Laura is concerned that the nation is deep in debt and adding to it with hurricane recovery.

“Social welfare programs are more desperately needed now than ever,” she said.  “Before the hurricanes, Congress was planning to consider legislation proposing deep cuts to Medicaid, food stamps, Medicare, housing assistance and financial aid for college students.”

Because of spending priorities in recent years, Laura said, the federal government is spending more than it receives. Congress is considering $35 billion in cuts that would cut millions of children and adults out of access to food stamps, health care, housing and education.  Meanwhile, other bills seek to make $70 billion in tax cuts for the wealthy permanent.

While tax cuts sound generally beneficial, she said people who earn little income or have small estates reap no benefit from them.

“We are responsible as a faith community, as neighbors, as cities, as states and as a nation to help people who do not have as much as we have gain access to medical care and to free them from worry about how they will put dinner on the table,” Laura added.

“All faiths have a tenet of social justice—to help and protect those who do not have the means to take care of themselves,” she said.

For her, that means more than individual assistance through charitable ministries and organizations.  It also means that individuals need to try to affect the whole society, to make changes so everyone has opportunities.

An ingredient in action is hope, Laura said. 

Although the degree of hope she has realistically depends on the day, she is overall hopeful that it is possible to change society.

“I have faith that the people of this country are good and care about each other,” she said.  “We may not see vast social change today or tomorrow, but there is a brighter future out there.”

For information, cal 329-1410.  



By Mary Stamp, Fig Tree editor - © October 2005

 


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