I was undecided whether to crosspost this piece from Talk to Action. What pushed me over the edge (not that it was all that hard to do) was that it's an encouraging story of how progressive Christians are standing-up to attacks by an alliance of neocons and the religious right; and how in the course of the battle, the neocons are trying to discredit the good guys in this story -- by linking them to me, via a footnote! And their rap on me is that I am "an uncredentialed blogger."
Heh. If that's the best they can do, the Methodists have got this one in the bag, folks.
I just learned that earlier this summer, an annual conference of the United Methodist Church in New York, overwhelmingly passed a resolution that calls on the nefarious neoconservative agency, the Washington, DC-based Institute on Religion and Democracy to cease and desist it's "deceptive and divisive tactics"; that Methodist affiliates of IRD decouple; that Methodists not support IRD in any way; and that IRD itself "disband" its Methodist program.
This is a dramatic and important step for the mainline churches, which have generally been loath to acknowledge the externally financed and directed attacks on their communions, and to address the complicity of some of their members.
The conference that passed the resolution is a representative body for New York City, Long Island, southeastern NY, about 1/2 of CT and a sliver of Pennsylvania. (The United Methodist Church is the second largest American protestant denomination after the Southern Baptist Convention.)
Here is part of the resolution, which was sponsored by the New York chapter of the Methodist Federation for Social Action, the full text of which was recently posted over at Street Prophets.
Whereas, the IRD and its UMAction Committee, led by Director Mark Tooley, are not related to the UMC and are not accountable to the UMC or its members through General Conference or a representational and elected Board of Directors--a charge (unaccountability) they often throw at denominational leaders who are democratically elected and who are accountable to various constituents and Boards of Directors.
Therefore, be it resolved, that we condemn the hardball, deceptive and divisive tactics of the Institute on Religion and Democracy and its UMAction Committee.
Therefore, be it further resolved, that we call for the following actions:
-- Good News/RENEW and The Confessing Movement to cease their partnership with the IRD
-- all caucus groups not to use the same kinds of hardball tactics exhibited by the IRD
-- all United Methodists not to support the IRD and to reject the agenda it works to impose on the UMC and the tactics it uses to advance them.
-- the IRD to disband its UMAction committee and cease its efforts to impose its agenda on the UMC.
-- all parts of the UMC to engage religion of the heart, in accordance with Wesley's teachings and the example of Christ, and join hands together so that we may move forward together in love and in good works.
IRD responded with a characteristically misleading and diversionary report, posted online by Rebecca Sharpe, the IRD consultant whose recent falsehood-riddled screed about a panel discussion I moderated, I reported on here.
Sharpe uses this occasion to continue the IRD tradition of diversion by among other things, ad hominem attacks. This time, she writes that the resolution mentioned some of my work, but rather than dealing with any of the substance, she writes this:
MFSA also cited Fred Clarkson, the un-credentialed blogger known for his frequent diatribes against IRD.
The New York Methodist resolution cited one of my blog posts about IRD in a footnote -- along with two book- length critical reports on IRD. Sharpe does not address the footnoted point, or challenge a single fact in my or anyone elses reporting. The Talk to Action post Sharpe sneers at was this one: Yo, Mainline Churches: Wake-Up and Smell the Coffee. I am honored to have found myself in good company in that footnote: Andrew Weaver and Steven Swecker, whose recent book Hardball on Holy Ground alerted many Methodists to the IRD's nefarious activities; and Leon Howell, whose book United Methodism @ Risk provided an earlier, well-reported wake-up call.
The IRD and its affiliates have been working in consort to disrupt and divide the major communions of mainline protestantism for many years. Now, a major gathering of one of the denominations targeted for dismembering has formally -- and by "overwhelming" vote -- has recognized the problem faced by their church; named the bad actors and their objectionable activities, and taken a firm first step in beginning to address them.