WASHINGTON — Rebuffing Christian radio commentator James Dobson, the board of directors of the National Association of Evangelicals reaffirmed its position that environmental protection, which it calls “creation care,” is an important moral issue.
Dobson, the founder of Focus on the Family, and two dozen other conservative Christian leaders, including Gary Bauer, Tony Perkins and Paul Weyrich, sent the board a letter this month denouncing the NAE’s vice president, the Rev. Richard Cizik, for urging attention to global warming.
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The NAE’s president, the Rev. Leith Anderson, said Saturday the board did not respond to the letter during a two-day meeting that ended Friday in Minneapolis. But, he said, the board reaffirmed a 2004 position paper, “For the Health of the Nations,” that outlined seven areas of civic responsibility for evangelicals, including creation care along with religious freedom, nurturing the family, sanctity of life, compassion for the poor, human rights and restraining violence.
On Friday, the NAE’s board approved a 12-page statement on terrorism and torture. Anderson said that Cizik gave a report to the board on his work in Washington as vice president for governmental affairs and that there was no effort to reprimand him. “I think there was a lot of support from me, from the executive committee and from the board for Rich Cizik,” Anderson said.
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