Statement on the FY'08 Budget
by heads of
THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, USA
EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH IN AMERICA
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (U.S.A.)
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST and
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
MAY 10, 2007
Dear Members of Congress,
As Congress works to resolve the differences in the House and
Senate version of the FY 2008 budget resolution passed in March,
we write now focusing through the lens of faith on several
important areas of great need. Representing 20 million
followers, we write to urge you to ensure that the federal
budget reflects our shared responsibility to the most vulnerable
in the United States and abroad.
In February, following the release of the President's FY 2008
Federal Budget, we wrote to the Congress regarding our vision of
the federal budget and our belief that the nation's budget must
represent a shared vision of justice and compassion for all of
God's people, both in our own nation and around the world. In
particular we expressed deep concern for cuts to programs that
serve the health, education and well-being of millions of people
living near or below the poverty line in the United States. We
applauded the important investments our country is making in
combating deadly poverty and disease abroad.
We are reminded in the Gospel of Luke that "From everyone to
whom much has been given, much will be required; and from the
one to whom much has been entrusted, even more will be demanded"
(Luke 12:48). The United States is a nation of great wealth and
resources and, indeed, much is expected of us individually, as
communities of faith and as a nation. Our denominations continue
to do ministry in the areas of our historic Christian
calling—working for reconciliation and serving those most
vulnerable in our world.
We continue to express profound concern regarding the cost of
the war in Iraq and the cost of extending large tax cuts to
those to whom much has been given, particularly in view of the
deep need to fund efforts aimed at alleviating poverty and
disease both at home and abroad.
We are encouraged that Congress responded to the President's
budget by passing budget resolutions that make fiscal
responsibility a priority, modestly increase domestic funding,
and ensure that the State Children's Health Insurance Program
(S-CHIP) and the Farm Bill will have the important resources
needed to protect struggling American farmers and the health and
nutritional needs of the working poor, children and the elderly.
In an effort to restore badly needed funds to human needs
programs that have recently seen year after year of funding
cuts, we urge you to include in the conference report the
House's $417.8 billion, the highest-passed discretionary
spending figure.
We also appreciate that the Senate unanimously voted to
restore $2.2 billion in funding for international-assistance
programs that had been cut by the Budget Committee. This funding
is critical to our nation's ability to deliver on its promises
in the fight against deadly poverty and disease abroad,
phenomena that kill one person every three seconds. President
Bush, along with leaders of both parties, repeatedly has made it
clear that this work is part of our nation's moral identity and
deserves to be prioritized even in times of tight fiscal
constraints. We strongly urge House-Senate Budget conferees to
adopt the Senate passed level of $39.8 billion for international
assistance.
Our world continues to live in tumultuous times, and it is
clearer than ever that our nation must reclaim its historic
destiny as a source of hope and opportunity for its own citizens
and for all people around the world. We pray for the Congress
and all the leaders of our nation. And we pray for peace and a
world restored and reconciled. We urge the Congress to seek
peace and pursue it and, as the budget process continues, to
embrace a vision of justice and compassion for all of God's
children.
Signed by:
The Reverend Mark S. Hanson
Presiding Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
The Most Reverend Katharine Jefferts Schori
Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church
The Reverend Dr. Clifton Kirkpatrick
Stated Clerk of the General Assembly, Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.)
Bishop Beverly Shamana
President of the United Methodist General Board of Church &
Society
The Reverend John H. Thomas
General Minister and President, United Church of Christ
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