Guymon Daily Herald

Tulsa Diocese ditches church coalition over abortion stance

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— The bishop of the Tulsa Diocese said he withdrew his organizati­on from the Oklahoma Conference of Churches last month because the coalition’s anti-racism and discrimina­tion stance doesn’t include what he called “the most marginaliz­ed” and discrimina­ted against group in the nation —

the unborn.

The OCC, which is an ecumenical coalition of churches, released last month its theologica­l statement on race and anti-discrimina­tion, which declared “that no person should experience discrimina­tion regardless of their sex, religion, race, immigratio­n status, sexual orientatio­n, political

affiliatio­n, age, gender identity/gender expression, ability, or socioecono­mic status.”

Seeing there was no mention of abortion in OCC’s newly released statement, Tulsa Bishop David Konderla withdrew the Roman Catholic diocese, he said in statement dated Nov. 6 on the group’s website, The Oklahoman report

ed Thursday.

“(The OCC) will not commit itself to defending the right to life of babies in the womb, the most marginaliz­ed, mistreated, abused and discrimina­ted against group in the country,” Konderla wrote in the statement. “(OCC’s) statement, with its glaring exclusion of the most vulnerable group

of persons in our midst, is rendered at best inconsiste­nt or even politicall­y motivated.”

The OCC is a politicall­y powerful group that was among several that backed a successful campaign for voters in the state to expand Medicaid health insurance to tens of thousands lowincome people. Oklahoma was the first state to so through amending its Constituti­on.

The Rev. Shannon Fleck, OCC’s executive director, said Wednesday that the conference hasn’t taken a stance on abortion since its founding in 1972.

“Since the beginning of the organizati­on, the conference has not taken a stance on either side of this issue because our denominati­ons are not all in agreement and they’ve known that. That’s not new,” she said.

In response to the bishop’s position on the issue, Fleck said the conference stands by its theologica­l statement.

Initially, Fleck had said Konderla removed his faith group from the coalition because he disagreed with the conference’s discrimina­tion protection­s for the LGBTQ community. But Konderla’s Nov. 6 statement said that notion was “erroneous.”

“They must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivit­y. Every sign of unjust discrimina­tion in their regard should be avoided,” Konderla wrote, referring to the LGBTQ community.

However, Konderla continued to say that marriage is an institutio­n between one man and one woman.

“I believe that such an organizati­on should be able to be forthright in its defense of the unborn and of the institutio­n of marriage between one man and one woman,” Konderla said of the church coalition.

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