Interreligious Working Group on
Domestic Human Needs
A Faith Reflection on the Federal Budget
As communities of faith, we are grounded
in a shared tradition of justice and compassion, and we are
called upon to hold ourselves and our communities accountable
to the moral standard of our Biblical tradition. We speak out
now because we are concerned about our national priorities.
The federal budget serves as a fundamental statement of who we
are as a nation. The decisions we make about how we generate
revenue and spend resources test our commitment to these
values. Thus, we hold that the federal budget should be viewed
and evaluated through a moral lens: does it uphold values that
will strengthen our life together as a nation and as part of
the global community?
Community and the Common Good
But seek the welfare of the city where I
have sent you… and pray to the Lord on its behalf, for in its
welfare you will have your welfare (Jeremiah 29:7, NRSV).
- Our nation’s wellbeing is dependent on
the wellbeing of all its members. In order to form a more
perfect union, the preamble to the U.S. Constitution commits
this nation to promoting the general welfare. In faith
language we would call that the "common good.” The budget
should reflect a commitment to the common good by ensuring
that the basic needs of all members of society are met. At
this time, when more than 45 million Americans are uninsured,
over 8 million are unemployed and over 12 percent live in
poverty, additional cuts to critical human needs programs
cannot be justified.
- Investments in education, job training,
work supports, healthcare, housing, food assistance and
environmental protection promote opportunity for all and
strengthen families and communities. These should be budget
priorities.
- Budget decisions must be evaluated not
just in the short term, but with respect to their long-term
effects on our children’s children, the global community and
on all of creation.
Concern for Those Who Are Poor and
Vulnerable
Give the king your justice, O God… May
he judge your people with righteousness, and your poor with
justice… May he defend the cause of the poor of the people and
give deliverance to the needy (Psalm 72:1-4, NRSV).
- Government has special responsibility to
care for the most vulnerable members of society. All budget
decisions and administrative procedures must be judged by
their impact on children, low-income families, the elderly,
people with disabilities and other vulnerable populations.
- Whatever one’s position on the war in
Iraq or on the tax cuts, these policies are driving the
deficit. Attempting to pay off the deficit by cutting
programs that affect needy populations, when these programs
did not lead to the deficit, is unjust.
Economic Justice
Woe to those who make unjust laws, to
those who issue oppressive decrees, to deprive the poor of their
rights and withhold justice from the oppressed of my people
(Isaiah 10:1-2, NIV).
- God has created a world of sufficiency
for all; the problem is not the lack of natural and economic
resources, but how they are shared, distributed and made
accessible within society.
- Our government should be a tool to
correct inequalities, not a means of institutionalizing them.
The federal budget should share the burdens of taxation,
according to one’s ability to pay, and distribute government
resources fairly to create opportunity for all.
Endorsing Organizations
-
American Baptist Churches USA
-
American Friends Service Committee
-
Bread for the World
-
Call to Renewal
-
Central Conference of American Rabbis
-
Church of the Brethren Witness/Washington
Office
-
Church Women United
-
Conference of Major Superiors of Men
-
The Episcopal Church, USA
-
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
-
Friends Committee on National Legislation
-
Jewish Council for Public Affairs
-
Leadership Conference of Women Religious
-
Mennonite Central Committee U.S.
Washington Office
-
National Advocacy Center of the Sisters
of the Good Shepherd
-
National Council of Churches of Christ in
the USA
-
NETWORK, A National Catholic Social
Justice Lobby
-
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Washington
Office
-
Union for Reform Judaism
-
Unitarian Universalist Association of
Congregations
-
United Church of Christ Justice & Witness
Ministries
-
The United Methodist Church - General
Board of Church and Society
- Women of Reform Judaism
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