Thursday, March 19, 2009

Micah members join effort for US foreign aid reform

Wal-Mart and the AFL-CIO Agree: The U.S. Can (and Must) Do a Better Job Fighting Poverty, Disease, and Lack of Opportunity in the Developing World
by David Beckmann and Steve Radelet

In the face of big global challenges, President Obama has rightly called for a new, smarter U.S. foreign policy that focuses on bolstering our long-term security, building our alliances, and expanding global prosperity. A central element of his new approach is elevating U.S. support for global development and balancing it with defense and diplomacy, which in practice means strengthening U.S. foreign assistance and other programs that fight poverty, disease, and lack of opportunity in developing nations.

Today, a diverse group of nearly 150 individuals and organizations -- including Wal-Mart, the AFL-CIO, former Joint Chiefs Chairman John Shalikashvili, three former USAID Administrators, Bread for the World, the Center for Global Development, the Center for American Progress, and World Wildlife Fund US -- sent a letter to President Obama and Congress pledging full support for their efforts to elevate global development. The signatories also call for U.S. foreign assistance programs to be enhanced and modernized in order to make sure that, in today's economic climate and for years to come, our development dollars are used effectively and reach the people who need help most...

Read the full article

Australian Baptists Support Earth Hour 2009


Earth Hour 2009 is a great opportunity for Baptists all over Australia to demonstrate support for creation care and responsible energy consumption, national Baptist leaders said today.

This year the event, launched in Sydney in 2007, will be a truly global phenomenon with almost 1,700 cities and municipalities in more than 80 countries already committed to “vote Earth” as part of the world’s first global election between Earth and global warming.

A campaign of the World Wildlife Fund, Earth Hour 2009 aims to reach more than one billion people, asking communities, business and governments to switch off the lights at 8.30pm on March 28th, for one hour.

“It’s a small step for individuals, but by acting together we can be part of the largest climate event in history, and at the same time spread the word that we care deeply about God’s world,” Baptist Union of Australia National Director Brian Winslade said.

The Baptist Union of Australia and the Baptist Union of Victoria had made climate change declarations, and last year the Baptist World Alliance (BWA) passed a unanimous resolution on climate change at its annual meetings in Prague.

The BWA statement confessed that we have often denied or ignored our interdependence with creation and abrogated our stewardship of creation; recognised our failure as Baptists to engage with these issues in an adequate and timely manner; and called upon Baptist leaders to strongly support and encourage government, corporate and community initiatives to address the causes of human-induced climate change.

The statement also urged church support of renewable energy technologies; caps on “greenhouse gas” emissions; carbon trading; greater use of “green” architecture, town planning and transport; and encouragement to conserve, reuse and recycle goods.

“Australian Baptists have led the global Baptist community on cutting edge issues before,” Baptist ethicist and public theologian Rod Benson said. “We worked hard to launch the Micah Challenge which now enjoys enormous favour around the world, and we introduced the climate change resolution at the BWA meetings in 2008. But there is much more for us to do as we boldly follow Jesus in prophetic leadership and biblical social responsibility. Earth Hour 2009 deserves your support and involvement.”

You and your church or small group can be part of Earth Hour 2009. Wherever you are at 8.30 pm on Saturday 28 March, turn off the lights for one hour. You will be reducing your carbon footprint, and participating in an awesome global event on unprecedented scale. And, as a Christian, you’ll be making a statement in favour of more responsible energy consumption and government policy.

For more information on Earth Hour 2009, go to www.earthhour.org

Read article at Christian Today

Friday, March 6, 2009

International Women's Day: Women and the MDGs


UN MILLENNIUM CAMPAIGN CAUTIONS THAT MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS WILL NOT BE MET UNLESS AND UNTIL WOMEN’S RIGHTS, EMPOWERMENT AND DEVELOPMENT ARE ACHIEVED

On International Women’s Day, Campaign calls on governments to take immediate action to curb maternal mortality and ensure girls and women have access to education, meaningful employment and political participation

March 6, 2009 –"I have been campaigning on the issue of maternal mortality for quite some time now. But last week, it hit me directly: My sister, Asmau, age 33, died in Nigeria, two hours after delivering her second child, a boy who she never held. Asmau was not an illiterate woman. She was a senior science teacher, and her husband is a college principal."

This experience of Dr. Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem, Deputy Director of the UN Millennium Campaign, sums up the sheer desperation and outrage experienced by many families who lose their loved ones needlessly during childbirth.

As International Women’s Day – March 8, 2009 -- approaches, the United Nations Millennium Campaign is issuing initial findings of a status report which indicates that the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) will not be realized unless and until women’s empowerment, rights and development are achieved. The report -- which reviewed the status of the MDGs in 17 African countries with a focus on gender equality, women’s empowerment and maternal health and will be released next month – finds that societies in which women’s equality is paramount are more likely to achieve the MDGs by 2015. Addressing inequalities based on gender greatly reduces poverty and increases levels of well-being for the entire population.

While the report focuses on Africa, the issues of equality for women, maternal health and education are pressing in many Asian countries as well. India, for example, has the highest number of maternal deaths in the world.
“Maternal mortality is one of the most blatant and unconscionable human rights violations of our time,” said Salil Shetty, Director of the UN Millennium Campaign. “In today’s world, more than 500,000 women still die annually in pregnancy and childbirth. The vast majority of these deaths are preventable. On International Women’s Day, we are calling on all governments in developing countries to take immediate and drastic action to reduce maternal mortality and to ensure that girls and women have access to education at all levels, are gainfully employed, and enjoy full political rights as both voters and decision makers.”

“Our governments must take the bull by the horns and develop concrete action plans aimed at drastically reducing the numbers of women dying during childbirth,” said Monica Omollo, a women’s rights campaigner based in Kenya. “Our leaders must realize that that by allowing women to die needlessly while giving life they are grossly violating their human rights."
The UN Millennium Campaign is therefore calling on governments in developing countries to increase political commitment to achieving the MDGs and:
•Provide a constitutional framework, including policy and legal provisions, which protects women’s economic, social and cultural rights.
•Reduce maternal mortality through national action plans that prioritize safe pregnancy and delivery as fundamental human rights.
•Ensure special attention to marginalized groups in health policies and programs.
•Guarantee the meaningful participation of women and local communities in the design, development, implementation and monitoring of initiatives to combat maternal deaths.
•Rapidly increase access to skilled birth attendants and health workers for emergency obstetric care and comprehensive reproductive health services.
•Promote access to education and reproductive health services.
•Foster the direct involvement of local communities in their health systems.
•Develop monitoring and accountability mechanisms to improve existing initiatives to combat maternal mortality, including health audits.

The Campaign is also calling on governments of developed countries to meet their commitments to provide 0.7% of their national incomes as foreign aid for the realization of the MDGs – financing that is essential to prevent the loss of more mothers during childbirth.


A Lenten Prayer for Justice, Mercy, and Humility


by Brian Swarts 03-04-2009
(From the Sojourner's "God's Politics" blog)


The season of Lent reminds us of the renewal that came through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. Lent is a time to prepare for the coming of Easter and to celebrate the gift of redemption. Lent is also a time to search for ways we can be part of God’s work of redemption and renewal in our world.

As we search for those things that need renewal here and now, we find the global economic crisis gives us a serious issue to reflect on. I believe that we have momentous opportunity in America, where the Spirit is calling us to greater leadership on global poverty and injustice in a time of turmoil. As the global economic crisis increases the number of people vulnerable to extreme poverty, hunger, and disease, it is increasingly urgent for Christians to serve as informed and effective advocates for the poor and the marginalized. While each of us is hurt by hard times, it is the people around the world living on less than $1/day, facing hunger, thirst, and illness, who bear the greatest burden of this crisis.

That’s why, during this Lenten season, we are inviting Christians around the nation to pray for those who have been hardest hit by the global crisis. In prayer, you will be joining “Micah Challenge” campaigns in numerous countries—from Great Britain to Rwanda—who have all committed to pray. Sometime over the next two months gather your family, friends, and church members together in praying our Prayer for Justice, Mercy, and Humility:

Prayer for Justice, Mercy, and Humility

Lord, hear our prayer:

Today we face the season of our redemption during a time of global crisis.

During this season teach us to understand the love that drove you to give up everything to save us all.

Give us the strength that only comes in weakness;

The renewal that only comes through death and resurrection.

Today many of us feel weakened, burdened, and overwhelmed by the challenges and uncertainties that lie ahead.

We ask that your strength be made perfect in our time of weakness.

While each of us is hurt by hard times, it is the people around the world living on less than $1/day, facing hunger, thirst, and illness, who bear the greatest burden of this crisis.

Just as your weakest hour proved to be the most generous, most life-giving moment in history,

We pray for that out of our own weakness comes a generosity of justice, mercy, and humility for those who bear burdens greater than our own.

Help us to remember that you are the God who, out of nothing, made everything.

The God who still has the power today to remake us.

So let us be remade, not overcome, by our global crisis;

Let us be purified, and not laid low, by injustice, greed, and inequality.

Let us commit ourselves to:

Act justly,
Love mercy,
And walk humbly with you, and with all those
who suffer or want.

This is our moment to change the world.

Because it is at our moment of crisis where your strength and your light, revealed to the world by our faith, become a force that is stronger than fear or death.

Today, move us to become the answer to our prayers.

Give us the strength to respond, in our own time of need, to the needs of those who have the least in our world.

Lead us to be your agents of hope and renewal during this season of redemption.

For it is only in You that we have
the power to change things;
It is only because of You that we have
the promise of renewal;
And yet is through us that You seek to do all these things.

Amen.

Ways to “Be the Answer” to This Prayer:

  1. Educate your community, church, or campus about the issues facing the impoverished and marginalized in our world.
  2. Advocate for the U.S. to lead other rich nations in pledging emergency aid to the most impoverished nations at the G20 meeting in April.
  3. Join thousands of other Christians praying for justice in Washington, D.C., for the culmination of our Lenten campaign, at the Sojourners Mobilization to End Poverty, April 26-29.