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Friday, May 25, 2007 12:20 AM CDT
Pastors pray for peace
MASON CITY — Ministry members from three churches met to pray about the ongoing conflict in Iraq on Thursday.

“I’ve been concerned about this for a long time,” said the Rev. Jack Gannett, interim pastor at Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church.

Little has been said or done in the community, he said. Yet this is the third war involving the United States since he began working in ministry.

“I think about the effects of it,” Gannett said.

As a pastor, Gannett said he deals with the families while loved ones are gone and with people who come back forever changed physically or emotionally because of experiences of war.

Phillip Cryan, program director for the Iowa Citizen Action Network, said he invited pastors to organize a prayer meeting concerning the war. ICAN is a statewide grassroots organization striving to create public awareness of national issues.

While there is admiration for those serving in the military in the Middle East, there is “also a strong conviction that the war needs to be brought to an end,” he said.

Cryan said he sees his role as one of creating opportunities for people throughout the state to express their feelings about the war in public.

“It seems the anguish of this war doesn’t have a lot to do with their political stripes any more,” Cryan said.

As an organization, ICAN is calling for members of Congress to set a date for an end to the war and seeking to urge U.S. Rep. Tom Latham, an Iowa Republican, to vote against the funding bill that no longer includes any timeline for withdrawal, Cryan said.

The Rev. Jim Magelssen, senior pastor at Trinity Lutheran Church, said he deals with issues related to the war from a personal perspective as well as in his position as pastor.

His son-in-law was deployed in Iraq in October 2005. Every day is frightening. Every day his life is in danger. He goes out looking for IEDs at night, Magelssen said. He’s spent just two weeks with a son who is a year old today. Hopefully, his son-in-law will be home in mid-summer.

In war, lives end before they’re supposed to, said Pete Feltman, youth pastor at First Presbyterian Church. A God of wholeness grieves when that happens.

“I see just a great hunger for an end to this business,” Gannett said.


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Showing The Last 3 comment(s) Comments On This Story

Marybeth Gardam wrote on May 25, 2007 4:39 PM:

" It is good to see people of faith realizing that there is more to sanctity of life than just abortion issues. Protecting life means also campaigning against unprovoked wars, wars waged for financial (oil) profits, and also against domestic violence in all its forms. Mother Theresa said it best: "If we have no peace it is because we have forgotten that we belong to one another". This is not the attitude the world is seeing in the US these days. We are not being the people we were meant to be when we allow our government to be a bully for profits around the world. "

Let's win! wrote on May 25, 2007 10:34 AM:

" I hope they pray that we win. "

Frank Adams wrote on May 25, 2007 10:16 AM:

" Evil must be confronted wherever it is found. Hundreds of thousands of innocent people died (and continue to die under tyrannical regimes) under Saddam. Because the US once had supported Iraq - state reasons to so do seem valid under different circumstances - is no excuse not to have brought down that wicked tyrant and his government. And make no mistake, Islamic terrorists operated in Iraq, flocked to it thereafter and remain in an attempt to continue to destabilize the government. These are facts easily ascertained by those who have no agenda to sell us. If these pastors really care for peace then they should support a quick, crushing, hugely damaging war with no holds barred - kill the enemy and break his will utterly until he sues for peace. Wars ALWAYS settle issues for a period of time and bring peace such that healing can occur. Without that war in our own country we might still have slavery - a dreadful thought. God bless Pr. Magelssen's son-in-law. I will uphold him in prayer until he is safely at home - and thank him for risking his life to protect and defend mine and my family's. How discouraged our servicemen must feel to have been abandoned by thier own people as seems evident in the media. BTW, setting a date for withdrawal is a foolish idea - the enemy cannot wait and retribution to those Iraqiis who prefer to live in peace will be devastating as they will be exterminated for having supported the revolution. One further thought: peace is not possible in the Middle East as long as the current Islamic interpretation of world order prevails (and is supported by foolish Christians and Jews). Islam will not exist except that it rules the world. That fact cannot be glossed and it is the single driving force behind world events at present. In short, it is us or them - no middle ground is possible. "

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