ONE Campaign Resources

 

ONE Logo
The ONE Campaign is a new effort to rally Americans, ONE by ONE, to the cause of ending poverty in our world and achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).


Through political action, its goals include:

  •  Direct an additional one percent of the U.S. budget to address extreme poverty.
  •  Support debt relief for the world’s poorest countries to help them meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
  • Make the rules of international trade fair so all may benefit from the global economy.


ONE Lutherans, Act Now!

Join the more than 60,000 Americans who have already signed the petition urging President-elect Obama to state his commitment to fighting global poverty and disease during his inaugural address on January 20, 2009. The Petition reads: "Dear President-elect Obama, In your inaugural address, please make a clear affirmation of your pledge to fight poverty and preventable diseases worldwide, and support that statement with an FY2010 budget request that puts the U.S. on track to meet your historic commitments."

Sign the petition! Visit this link at the ONE website: please click here

Download and Order Resources



ONE Sabbath

Timeline: Now through the first 100 days of the next Administration.

ONE Sabbath is a faith-based effort for people who are committed to urging our elected officials to demonstrate leadership in addressing global poverty, hunger and disease. You can raise awareness about these issues.

How can you engage your congregation?

Encourage people to advocate to their elected officials and the next president by holding worship services, small-group discussions and youth activities which focus on ending extreme poverty, global disease and the suffering they cause.

If you are a member of a ONE Lutheran Congregation, ONE Sabbath is one way to continue raising awareness about your congregations’ commitment to ending global poverty. If you are not a ONE Lutheran Congregation, ONE Sabbath is a great opportunity for you to introduce the ONE Lutheran Campaign to your congregation. Click here for more information on how to become a ONE Lutheran Congregation.

Additional Resources:

- ONE Faith Videos featuring Bishop Mark S. Hanson and other religious leaders. For a copy of this DVD which includes three different videos, email your address to onelutheran@elca.org.

- Click here to download ONE Sabbath’s Christian materials.

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Articles, Fact Sheets and Background of the MDGs



Statements

 

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"That All May Be One"

A Joint Pastoral Letter and Reflection on Global Poverty and the Millennium Development Goals

“I ask not only on behalf of these, but also on behalf of those who will believe in me through their word, that they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they also be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me.” (John 17: 20-21)

Brothers and Sisters:

Five years ago The Episcopal Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) entered into a relationship of full communion. As the name of the agreement, Called to Common Mission, makes clear, the unity lived out between our two churches is for the sake of God’s mission in the world. The full flourishing of our world and the human family requires our urgent attention to the fight to end global poverty and build a more peaceful, secure world for all God’s people. The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) provide the Church and the world with a clear path to do this.
Extreme poverty binds more than one billion of God’s children, depriving them of the abundant life God intends for all. The MDGs are a set of eight targets for eradicating global poverty adopted by the 191 member states of the United Nations, including the United States, out of the conviction that humanity can build a better and safer world if it is willing to unite. The Goals reflect the reality that the resources, strategies, and knowledge to end global poverty exist if only the moral and political will can be built. Christians must play a key role building this will and holding governments accountable for promises made.

A world that meets the Goals would have 500 million fewer people living on less than a dollar a day, 70 percent of whom will be women. More than 400 million fewer people will go to bed hungry each night. The lives of 30 million children currently destined to die before their fifth birthday would be saved. The rise of HIV and AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis would be halted, and infection and death rates would begin to decline. The population of orphans in the world – currently numbered at more than 110 million – would begin to decline as well. In short, a world that has achieved the MDGs will be a world that more greatly reflects Christ’s prayer that all be one as he and the Father are one.

This joint pastoral letter comes as the ELCA and The Episcopal Church embark upon new shared commitment to the MDGs, particularly through our collaboration in ONE: The Campaign to Make Poverty History, a large and growing movement of more than 2.3 million Americans working for the end of global poverty. We hope that by reflecting together on the challenge of global poverty, our communities may be called into deeper conversation, collaboration, and advocacy on this urgent topic.

We invite you to consider the four reflections on global poverty that follow, each examining the church’s engagement with the Goals from a different perspective. They need not be read together and, in fact, time between each might invite deeper discernment of God’s calling to the Church at this moment in the life of the world.

As churches that stand in the shadow of the cross – knowing that in God’s kingdom death and sorrow always give way to resurrection and life – we pray that the Spirit may equip us through the deathless love of the Risen Christ for God’s mission of making all things new.

In Christ’s peace,
The Most Rev. Frank T. Griswold
Presiding Bishop and Primate
The Episcopal Church

The Rev. Mark S. Hanson
Presiding Bishop
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

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