Does all this mean that Kerry (a Catholic) is more a Methodist than Bush?
Allan

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "John Maynard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, October 23, 2004 10:45 AM
Subject: Candidates don't always espouse church beliefs


Today is Sat, 23 Oct2004

Candidates don't always espouse church beliefs
[Re. the US Presidential Election]

Oct. 7, 2004

A United Methodist News Service Analysis
By Amy Green*

The United Methodist Church has both Republican and Democratic candidates
in this presidential election, but their beliefs don't always match the
denomination's.

President Bush has been most criticized by church leaders for his invasion
of Iraq. His "pre-emptive strike" strategy prompted outcry from some
bishops, who saw it as a violation of the belief that war should be a last
resort. The church's Book of Discipline calls on United Methodists to
"reject war as a usual instrument of national foreign policy and insist
that the first moral duty of all nations (be) to resolve by peaceful means
every dispute that arises."

Like Bush, both Vice President Dick Cheney and U.S. Sen. John Edwards, the
Democratic vice-presidential candidate, are United Methodist. The
Democratic presidential nominee, U.S. Sen. John Kerry, is Catholic.

Both the Bush and Kerry campaigns deviate from United Methodist beliefs on
a variety of issues. The denomination's Board of Church and Society has put
together a guide to help voters compare the candidates' beliefs to the
church's. The resource, available at
http://www.umc-gbcs.org/uploads/csa/2742004%20Election%20Platforms.pdf, is
compiled from the church's Social Principles and resolutions, campaign
platforms and candidates' statements.

Here are a few highlights:

The United Methodist Church supports conflict resolution through the United
Nations and sees cooperation with the organization as an alternative to war
and terrorism. The church opposes indiscriminate military force to fight
terrorism. Bush supports the Patriot Act, which gives expanded powers to
law enforcement and intelligence agencies in fighting terrorism, while Sen.
John Kerry advocates letting it expire.

The church has quarreled internally for years over homosexuality. Its top
legislative body, the General Conference, voted last spring to retain its
stance that homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching and that
marriage is for a man and woman. The church supports the basic rights of
homosexuals to housing, education, employment and other services. Bush
supports a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. Kerry is against
gay marriage but opposes a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage.
He supports civil rights for homosexuals.

The denomination supports keeping abortion legal but opposes late-term or
partial-birth abortion except for when a mother's life is in danger or
severe deformities make life impossible for a fetus. Bush supports a
constitutional amendment banning abortion and legislation granting 14th
Amendment protection to unborn children. Kerry supports keeping abortion
legal but opposes partial-birth abortion.

The United Methodist Church supports genetic research to meet fundamental
food supply and other needs, but the church is against human cloning and
genetic therapies that produce waste embryos. Bush is against federally
funded stem-cell research and human cloning, while Kerry supports federally
funded stem-cell research and cloning for therapeutic purposes.

The denomination opposes the death penalty. Bush supports it, while Kerry
opposes it.

In addition to the Board of Church and Society's comparison guide, the
United Methodist Church is offering a prayer resource for the weeks leading
up to the election. The United Methodist Board of Discipleship has released
A Guide to Prayer for the 2004 National Election, covering Oct. 10 through
Election Day, Nov. 2. The personal prayer guide is available as a
downloadable PDF document at www.upperroom.org/bookstore. Downloading it
costs $2.50.

The National Council of Churches is also offering a session for group or
individual study at www.ncccusa.org/electionyearprinciplesguide.html.

*Green is a freelance journalist based in Nashville, Tenn.

News media contact: Tim Tanton, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5473 or
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

UMC.org is the official online ministry of The United Methodist Church.

� 2004 United Methodist Communications
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John Maynard  ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
PO Box 600, Cowes VIC  3922  Australia
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