Wednesday, March 14, 2007

The Great Moral Issues

Ready to Grow recently posted a link to to this article in which Jim Wallis (author of God's Politics) challenges James Dobson (of Focus on the Family) to a debate after Dobson wrote a scathing letter to the National Association of Evangelicals claiming, among other things that...

...we have observed that Cizik and others are using the global warming controversy to shift the emphasis away from the great moral issues of our time, notably the sanctity of human life, the integrity of marriage and the teaching of sexual abstinence and morality to our children.

Wallis' response?

Is the fact that 30,000 children will die globally today, and everyday, from needless hunger and disease a great moral issue for evangelical Christians? How about the reality of 3 billion of God’s children living on less than $2 per day? And isn’t the still-widespread and needless poverty in our own country, the richest nation in the world, a moral scandal? What about pandemics like HIV/AIDS that wipe out whole generations and countries, or the sex trafficking of massive numbers of women and children? Should genocide in Darfur be a moral issue for Christians? And what about disastrous wars like Iraq? And then there is, of course, the issue that got Dobson and his allies so agitated. If the scientific consensus is right - climate change is real, is caused substantially by human activity, and could result in hundreds of thousands of deaths - then isn’t that also a great moral issue? Could global warming actually be alarming evidence of human tinkering with God’s creation?

I truly hope Dobson takes up the challenge. This is a debate (or, as Wallis calls it, a conversation) I'd really love to hear.

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Much as I love James Dobson and respect his courage and convictions and applaud his accomplishments,I sometimes think he has a ploarizing effect and I would have ot side with Wallis in looking at the big picture and not just focusing on a few issues where there seems to be very little consensus between the Christian worldview and the "world's worldview".Every just cause needs an articulate and effective spokesman and God calls different people to champion different causes. I'd love to listen to the "conversation" if you can tell me how and when. Love you!Mom