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Young evangelicals call for end to nuclear weapons
Bob Allen, Associated Baptist Press
April 29, 2009
4 MIN READ TIME

Young evangelicals call for end to nuclear weapons

Young evangelicals call for end to nuclear weapons
Bob Allen, Associated Baptist Press
April 29, 2009

AUSTIN, Texas — A group of under-40 evangelicals attending a leadership meeting in Texas announced April 28 a new initiative to mobilize American Christians to eliminate nuclear weapons.

“We have all heard about this broadening of the evangelical agenda,” said Katie Paris of Faith in Public Life, a progressive group for advancing faith in the public square. “Today something new is happening. Younger Christians are setting the agenda — elevating and acting on an issue that has been off the popular radar for decades. They are engaging politics in a way that is very different from the generation that came before them, defying easy political categorization and breaking through theological division.”

Tyler Wigg-Stevenson, 31, an ordained Baptist minister and member of First Baptist Church in Nashville, Tenn., is the founding director of the Two Futures Project, a movement of American Christians calling for the global abolition of nuclear weapons.

“The truth that has been recognized in foreign-policy circles over the past several years must now make its way into the public consciousness,” he said in a conference call with reporters to announce the initiative. “In a post 9/11 era the weapons that we relied upon as our ultimate ace in the hole have in fact become the greatest threat to us all.”

Wigg-Stevenson said the doctrine of mutually assured destruction that produced a stalemate between the United States and Soviet Union during the Cold War “is now obsolete.”

“A two-tiered world of nuclear haves and have-nots will eventually lead to uncontrollable proliferation and an un-deterrable terrorist bomb,” he said, “which would not only cause mass casualties, but catastrophic economic effects that would leave no corner of the planet untouched.”

Wigg-Stevenson said nuclear weapons touch on a number of Christian moral concerns, including protection of innocent life, care for creation and concern for the poor. He labeled reliance on weapons of mass destruction “enacted blasphemy.”

“Who do we think we are to claim authority over life itself and the welfare of future generations?” he asked. “That power belongs to God alone.”

Jonathan Merritt, national spokesperson for the Southern Baptist Environment and Climate Initiative, spoke in support of the initiative.

“Nuclear weapons are not only unacceptable, they are un-Christian,” Merritt said. “As followers of Jesus we serve a God that abhors the shedding of innocent blood.”

“We understand that those that will be affected by the detonation of a nuclear bomb are not numbers,” Merritt said. “They are objects of God’s love, wonderful creations made in his image.”

Merritt said he is aware that some people think the goal of eliminating nuclear weapons worldwide is impossible.

“Calling something impossible is often a tool of distraction employed by those who simply lack moral courage,” he said. “As Christians, our decisions must be made on morality, not plausibility. We serve a God through which all things are possible. So when Christians hide behind the skirt of probability, it is the ultimate act of distrust.”

Merritt said he supports the Two Futures Project as a Southern Baptist, citing the 2000 Baptist Faith & Message article calling it the duty of Christians to seek peace and do all in their power to end war.

Southern Baptists have always placed immense value on human life, which is an important part of the pursuit of peace,” Merritt said. “Therefore I find this effort wholly consistent with both my theological convictions and a long-held Baptist belief.”

Merritt, 26, spearheaded the March 2008 environmental declaration criticizing SBC resolutions as too timid on the issue of climate change.

The Southern Baptist Convention adopted resolutions supporting multilateral nuclear disarmament in 1978, 1979, 1982 and 1983.

The most recent Southern Baptist resolution mentioning nuclear weapons came in 2002. It urged national leaders to prevent terrorist-supporting nations from attaining weapons of mass destruction.

(EDITOR’S NOTE — Allen is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press.)