Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Remembering 9/11
Our prayers and hearts are with those who lost loved ones on September 11, 2001. We also pray for peace of our world and for the courage to forgive those who hate us.
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Synod Statement on Syria
We are deeply concerned about events in Syria. We grieve for our 
brothers and sisters who have suffered so deeply for so long. We yearn 
for an end to the bloodshed and renew our call for a cease-fire and a 
mediated process involving all parties to provide new choices for all 
Syrians.
We condemn the use of chemical weapons. Regardless of who perpetrated
 the attack, such a usage violates a longstanding international norm.  
We recognize the authority and the responsibility of the United Nations 
Security Council to deal with this violation of international law. We 
call all nations to encourage the Security Council to address this 
illegal and immoral act. We do not doubt that justice is needed, but 
question the unilateral and inevitably selective role the United States 
has too often played, too often leading to greater violence, terrorism, 
and instability.
We call upon the President and the members of Congress to follow the 
example of other strong leaders in the past by exercising the courage 
and wisdom to refrain from military action that is likely to escalate 
the conflict further, and to bring our country directly into another war
 in the Middle East.
We applaud the President’s efforts to consult widely, conferring with
 international leaders and with Congress.  Now we ask him to spend time 
over this holiday weekend listening to what Americans want and fear.
Now is not the time to feed the violence and instability that has 
claimed the lives of over 100,000 Syrians, driven 3.4 million Syrians 
from their country, and displaced an additional 6.8 million Syrians from
 their homes. Most people affected by the conflict are noncombatants. 
Expanding the conflict will increase the suffering of the innocent. 
Now is the time to heed the voices of our church partners who pray 
and call and work for peace. Our partners look to us to challenge 
policies of our government that help to fuel conflict in Syria and proxy
 wars across the Middle East.
Now is the time to reflect on the lessons of 12 years of involvement 
in conflict in the Middle East by the United States. Limited engagement 
is never truly limited.
Now is the time to support the peacemakers of Syria who seek to end 
the violence and build a future. In any Congressional deliberations, we 
urge that nonviolent forms of intervention be considered, and that next 
steps beyond military force be grounded in defensible cooperative goals 
for the region.
Now is the time for all outside parties to cease all forms of 
military intervention in Syria. States and and non-state actors must 
stop feeding the conflict in Syria by sending weapons to the government 
and to opposition forces.
Now is the time to renew the efforts for a diplomatic solution. The 
United States must work with the United Nations and other governments to
 contain the violence, restore stability in the region, provide 
humanitarian assistance, and encourage the building of an inclusive 
society in Syria that protects the rights of all its citizens.
Now—in the grimmest of situations—is the time to build a coalition of
 nations and peoples willing to do the long, hard, and essential work of
 establishing interfaith relationships of respect and understanding.
Now—for Syria and all its neighbors—is the time to seek a new vision 
of cooperation and nonviolence that will support an intervention with 
the power of impartial justice that will lead to a just and lasting 
peace.
Now is the time to pray for wisdom for leaders, for courage to turn 
from violence, for grace to build and nurture relationships, for justice
 to roll down like waters, and for peace to prevail in Syria.
“For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven.” For the people of Syria, may it now be a time for peace.
Congregational Episcopal Church USA Synod
USA Presbytery Puritan Church  
