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Church leaders support ‘Open Letter’ to Political Candidates

By / 10 September 2008

Church leaders from the Anglican, Baptist, Catholic, Methodist, Presbyterian and Salvation Army churches have lent their support to an “Open Letter” issued by the New Zealand Council of Christian Social Services (NZCCSS) that calls for all political candidates in this year’s General Election to “front up to the issue of reducing persistent levels of poverty in Aotearoa New Zealand.”

[ See letter: open-letter-to-political-candidates.pdf]

 ”As made clear in our joint Church leaders’ statement in March we believe that issues related to poverty, families and children, older people, housing and essential social services are issues that individual politicians need to take personal leadership on. There is also a clear expectation that they offer the voting public something significant to say on these issues, that can then be part of a process of a honest and open debate,” said Archbishop David Moxon of the Anglican Church.  

The Reverend Brian Turner, Methodist Church, Rodney Macann, Baptist Churches of New Zealand, and the Right Reverend Pamela Tankersley, Presbyterian Church, all described the period before an election as a unique opportunity to intensify discussion about the type of society we live in.  ”The affect that poverty has on vulnerable New Zealanders is an issue we need to bring to the fore as part of the call we have as Christians to serve those on the margins of society,” said Pamela Tankersley.  ”A question that we need to ask ourselves is whether we are striving hard enough as a nation to put aside self-interest and to find a stronger collective social conscience in 2008,” said Brian Turner.  ”When our politicians talk about the policies they plan to introduce we want them to talk about he extent to which those policies can be considered just and compassionate, and we want them to explicitly address the issue of reducing poverty,” said Rodney Macann.

 ”Next week the Catholic Church holds its annual Social Justice Week and the focus is on the latest publication from Caritas, our social justice agency, titled ‘Look and look again: Poverty in an affluent society’,” said Archbishop John Dew of Wellington. “As made clear in the recent statement by Catholic Bishops we are not about to tell people how to vote, but the way in which individual politicians respond to social justice issues, particularly poverty, is obviously an important signal of their integrity and values”. 

Garth McKenzie, Salvation Army Commissioner, said that any investment in addressing poverty in Aotearoa New Zealand is a “socially responsible investment”.  ”In the set of issues and reflections for this year’s election we have just published in our publication ‘A New Journey’, we argue that we all need to have a concern about the structures which marginalise people and leave them in poverty. The message we have for our would-be leaders is that we need to do more as a nation t look for ways of building just structures – locally, nationally and even globally”. 

Earlier this year the Church leaders also endorsed the Council’s information programme titled ‘Aroha tetahi ki tetahi – Let us look after each other’. The programme aims to raise public awareness of social justice and compassion issues and to ensure that the situation of the poor and vulnerable in Aotearoa New Zealand is given a more prominent place on the agenda of public concerns in 2008. Through the programme thousands of posters and brochures, promoting themes such as treasuring our children and valuing older people, have been distributed to Churches and providers of essential social services throughout New Zealand.  

The five “calls” made by the programme are for a more just and compassionate society through the implementation of policies to:

  • Utilise our nation’s prosperity to eliminate poverty
  • Support families and communites to nurture and portect our children
  • Provide older people with a range of choices for their homes, support and lifestyle
  • Enable access to good, affordable housing for everyone
  • Support community-based partnership-driven solutions to social issues in the community

More information is available at www.justiceandcompassion.org.nz

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About us

This site is run by the Social Justice Commission of the Anglican Church.

We seek to nurture justice spirituality and imagination, and engage in advocacy in all areas of life, overcoming poverty and transforming violence.

We encourage people to think and live “justly”, and emphasise debate and action on local, national and global issues.

Although we are Anglican, our vision isn’t so much about being Anglican. It’s about living justly. Justice is about how you live your life, and being just where we are. Working together, we can all flourish.

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