![]() General Assembly Council approves $400,000 for NCC By John H. Adams The Layman Online Saturday, February 19, 2000 LOUISVILLE - The General Assembly Council of the Presbyterian Church (USA) voted 52-6 on Feb. 19 to give the National Council of Churches $400,000 to help the council dig out of its $4-million 1999 deficit. The PCUSA council attached some strings to the money and decided to transmit a pastoral letter to congregations explaining the bailout for the NCC, the loss of $1.7 million or more by "The Dawn An Epiphany," and a $3-million-plus emergency appropriation for publishing denomination curricula. The letter was proposed as a response to overwhelming opposition to NCC funding by individual Presbyterians and sessions across the nation and concerns raised over the curricula cost and "The Dawn" losses. Overwhelming opposition John Detterick, executive director of the General Assembly Council, said that as of Feb. 19 PCUSA headquarters in Louisville had received 1,170 communications - letters, E-mail and phone calls - opposing continued funding for the NCC. Detterick said there were 131 responses favorable to the bailout contribution. "My sense is that as much as half of those responses may have been from sessions," Detterick said. Responses continued to arrive in Louisville as the General Assembly met and likely after it adjourned on Feb. 19. Five contingencies The bailout plan reflected an awareness of that opposition. The contingencies for transmitting the $400,000 include:
Pledge to PCUSA Foundation Robert "Bob" Edgar, a Methodist minister, former congressman and former president of Claremont School of Theology in California, who is the new general secretary of the NCC, spoke to the General Assembly Council the day before its vote. Edgar added an incentive to keep the PCUSA in the NCC's camp: He said the NCC is devising a plan to place its endowment funds in the PCUSA Foundation. Asked later in an interview with The Presbyterian Layman how much money would be transferred to the foundation, Edgar said none currently because the NCC has no endowment. But he says he intends to raise millions of dollars for one. Detterick told The Layman that it was his idea to encourage Edgar to place NCC funds in the PCUSA Foundation. He said he heard that Edgar wanted to start an endowment and that he sent word through an intermediary suggesting that the PCUSA Foundation is unrivaled. In discussions and comments about the National Council of Churches, there was no effort to justify the financial or management fiascos. Both Detterick and Stated Clerk Clifton Kilpatrick repeatedly said the NCC had made serious mistakes -- but that the organization was now on the right course under Edgar's leadership. Key talking point A statement by Peter J. Pizor of Cody, Wy., who is chairman-elect of the General Assembly Council, became a key talking point in the discussions. Pizor's statement criticized the NCC as an organization with its "finances out of control" and its internal management "in shambles." But he also recommended continued membership and funding for the NCC. Pizor's recommendations included:
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