The Network of Spiritual Progressives
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NSP is a project of the Tikkun Community.

To join the Network of Spiritual Progressives Click Here.
The Network of Spiritual Progressives (NSP) is an association of people interested in:
1. Changing the Bottom Line in America. Today, institutions and social practices are judged efficient, rational and productive to the extent that they maximize money and power.That's the Old Bottom Line. Now Here is the NEW BOTTOM LINE for which we advocate: We believe that they should be judged rational, efficient and productive not only to the extent that they maximize money and power, but also to the extent that they maximize love and caring, ethical and ecological sensitivity and behavior, kindness and generosity, non-violence and peace, and to the extent that they enhance our capacities to respond to other human beings in a way that honors them as embodiments of the sacred, and enhances our capacities to respond to the earth and the universe with awe, wonder and radical amazement.
2. Challenging the misuse of religion, God and spirit by the
Religious Right, and educating people of faith to the understanding
that a serious commitment to God, religion and spirit should manifest
in social activism aimed at peace, universal disarmament, social
justice with a preferential option for the needs of the poor and the
oppressed, a commitment to end poverty, hunger, homelessness,
inadequate education and inadequate health care all around the world,
and a commitment to nuclear non-proliferation, environmental protection
and repair of the damage done to the planet by 150 years of
envrionmentally irresponsible approaches to industrialization, investment, trade, energy and transportation.
3. Challenging the many anti-religious and anti-spiritual assumptions and behaviors that have increasingly become part of the liberal culture, and challenging as well the extreme individualism and me-firstism that permeate all parts of the global market culture. We will educate people in social change movements to carefully distinguish between their legitimate critiques of the Religious Right and their illegitimate generalizing of those criticisms to all religious or spiritual beliefs and practices. We will help social change activists and others in the liberal and progressive culture become more conscious of and less afraid to affirm their own inner spiritual yearnings and to reconstitute a visionary progressive social movement that incorporates the spiritual dimension, of which the loving, spiritually elevating and connecting aspects of religion has been one expression (but so has the group-in-fusion experience of the movements of the 30's and the 60's and the communitarian aspirations of many other efforts--social healing and health care, progressive summer camps, the wide appeal of service and service learning, the women's spirituality movement etc).
The Network is a project of The Tikkun Community, so when you join
you automatically receive the option of free membership in The Tikkun
Commnunity. You will also receive a one year subscription to Tikkun magazine.
Our
perspective is more fully articulated in the Core Vision of The
Tikkun Community which you can find at www.tikkun.org,and the article
there entitled Why America Needs A Spiritual Politics. If you feel
uncomfortable with the perspective articulated there, you should not
join the Network of Spiritual Progressives which is an organization
formed around those ideas.
We will also draw inspiration from Jim
Wallis' book God's Politics and we will encourage use of Rabbi
Michael Lerner's forthcoming (Jan 2006) The Left Hand of God as a study
text for local chapters of the NSP in the Winter and Spring of 2006, as
well as Michael Nagler's The Search for a Nonviolent Future. These
three books, plus the articles by Peter Gabel in Tikkun Magazine,
should be considered foundational. But we would also strongly urge
members of our Network to study Mary C. Grey's Sacred Longings:
The Ecological Spirit and Global Culture, Kirk Schneider's Rediscovery
of Awe, Jonathan Schell's The Unconquerable World, Cornel
West's Democracy Matters, Alice Miller's The Body Never Lies,
John Dear's The God of Peace, Rev. Tony Campolo's Speaking My
Mind, Sister Joan Chittister's Heart of Flesh: A Feminist
Spirituality for Women and Men, Sharon Welch's After Empire, Charlene
Spretnak's The Resurgence of the Real, Peter Gabel's The Bank
Teller and Other Essays on The Politics of Meaning, Jonathan
Sacks’ To Heal a Fractured World, Robert Inchausti’s Subversive
Orthodoxies, too many of the books of Walter Brueggemann, Abraham
Joshua Heschel, Rosemary Ruether, Robert Thurman, Thomas Merton, Sharon
Salzberg, Sylvia Boorstein and Wendell Berry to list separately, Zalman
Schachter Shalomi’s Ageing and Sageing, Arthur Waskow’s Down to Earth
Judaism: Food, Money, Sex and the Rest of Life, Harvey Cox’s When
Jesus Came to Harvard, Jorge Ferrer’s Revisioning Transpersonal Theory:
A Participatory Vision of Human Spirituality, and Michael Lerner's
Healing Israel/Palestine.
Many of the local chapters of The Tikkun Community have already been
functioning, in effect, as the local branch of the Network of
Progressive Spiritual Activism, and you are welcome to join the local
Tikkun Community and become active with it in these activities.
However, there are some chapters that do not have a particular interest
in this set of concerns, and are more involved in Healing
Israel/Palestine or environmental or other related issues. In that
case, you are welcome to create another local chapter that is focused
primarily on the Network of Progressive Spiritual Activism projects,
and to coordinate with the existing local chapter on activities of
shared interest. A National Advisory Board (in formation--and you are
free to nominate people after you've received their consent) will give
guidance to Rabbi Lerner and the other co-chair of The Tikkun Community
who will provide the national direction for the organization.
The Network has the following foci for its first two years of operation (from April 2005-April 2007):
1. The Conferences on Spiritual Activism, July, 2005, Berkeley, CA and Spring, 2006, Washington, D.C.
The goal of these conferences is to bring together spiritual activists
who share our goals, and then seek to further define the approach that
we have been developing and its implications for social policy and
political activism. We
hope to have a yearly conference of this sort. In 2007 we will finalize
a Platform which we will then attempt to bring into the national debate.
2. Support for an Independent Judiciary
The systematic attempt by the political Right to portray the courts as
involved in a conspiracy to undermine religious values poses an
immediate danger to the separation of church and state. That danger
goes beyond the specific efforts of the Bush Administration and its
allies in Congress to pack the courts with right-wing judges, something
it has already been doing successfully. The greater danger still is
that the Right will succeed in creating a climate of fear in which
liberals and moderates in the judiciary, and even in the Congress and
in other positions of authority in the media, educational institutions,
government and corporate life, will feel intimidated to speak out or
pursue their own views for fear that they too will be vulnerable. For
that reason, the NSP (Network of Spiritual Progressives) will encourage
its members to organize local activities in support of an independent
judiciary. We encourage local groups to launch a weekly information
picket in front of court houses aimed at supporting the independence of
the judiciary, at encouraging judges and potential jurors to use their
own intelligence and intuitions in making judicial determination, and
to educate the public to the many benefits that have accrued to
American society by virtue of an independent judiciary. We will also
seek to do outreach to the legal profession and the media around these
issues.
3. Spiritual Democrats, Spiritual Greens
We will seek to provide
education on our core issues to the Democrats, the Greens, other
political parties,
environmental organizations, women’s organizations, gay and lesbian
organizations, the labor movement, civil rights and civil liberties
organizations about the need to create a climate welcoming to religious
and spiritual people and concerns. Members of the Network will meet with elected officials, party and
social change movement activists, and others in these movements, to
develop political platforms that have a spiritually progressive message
and to seek to uproot attitudes and messages from these movements that
are hostile, ridiculing or unfriendly to progressive spiritual and
religion practices and beliefs. NSP activists will seek to strategize with these movements about ways
to incorporate a spiritual-positive approach into their movements and
to avoid religio-phobia. NSP members may decide to form a caucus inside
any of the political parties across the spectrum in order to introduce
our perspective.
4. Study and Theory Development
Using Rabbi Michael Lerner’s book The Left Hand of God
(HarperSanFrancisco, Jan. 2006) Jim Wallis’ book God’s Politics. and Michael Nagler's book The Search for a NonViolent Future as
foundational, the NSP will try to educate itself and then others about
what a progressive spiritual politics could look like in the U.S. In
particular, the NPSA will attempt to convince the
social-change-positive liberal and progressive movements to adopt and
popularize the Spiritual Covenant with America that will be proposed in
The Left Hand of God.
5. Think Tank Activity
The NSP will seek to develop an
ongoing think tank that produces detailed analyses of contemporary
policy issues.
6. Conference Call
To link activists in a more interactive way, we will have a bi-weekly
conference call. It is understood that the conference call is not a
decision making instrument for the Network, but rather a way to
exchange ideas and information.
7. Outreach to the Media
The NSP will seek to hone media-oriented skills so that members may get
their message heard more effectively in both mainstream and the growing
alternative media.
8. New Bottom Line in Your Profession, Union or Work Place
The
NSP will encourage people within each profession or work place to form
ongoing discussions and consciousness raising groups aimed at
developing a concrete vision of what a New Bottom Line might look like
when applied to that particular profession or workplace.
9. Exercising the Responsibility that is Part of our Democratic
Heritage
We must nonviolently resist attacks upon our freedoms and what we deem to be excesses of our foreign and domestic policies. Such
nonviolent resistance would include, at the appropriate time and place,
civil disobedience for which we would accept fair legal penalties as an
integral part, and many other nonviolent mechanisms that have been used
with success, for example against corrupt and dictatorial regimes, in
the decades following the careers of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther
King, Jr. Some people in our Network of Spiritual Progressives
have begun to consider the possibility of Non-violent civil
disobedience in support of our spiritual politics agenda, including
bringing the troops home from Iraq, transforming American foreign
policy from a dominate-the-other to a generosity-for-the-other approach
to security, ecological sanity, support for a Global Marshall Plan, an
end to US torture of prisoners, single-payer health care, funding of
programs for middle income and the poor and rescinding of tax cuts for
the rich, defense of an independent judiciary, human rights, and
separation of church & state. They are discussing the possibility
of calling for a major mobilization of spiritual people around these
themes in Washington D.C. sometime in the Spring of 2006. The
discussion is purely exploratory at this point, but there is general
agreement that sometime in the next year and a half there should be
some national activity challenging the drift of American politics by
presenting an alternative, focused through a public action of a
non-violent nature, specifically led by and framed by and for spiritual
and religious people (plus any secular friends who are open to a
spiritual and non-violent focus, non-violent both in substance and in
the discourse).
10. Ethical Consumption and Environmental Issues
We are in
the very early stages of organizing a global movement to encourage
consumption of goods that have been produced by companies that are just
both in pay and treatment of their workers, and produced in ways that
are environmentally sustainable and make a contribution to the common
good. This will take years to put in place, but our goal is to have
every religious and spiritual movement on the planet coordinating a
massive effort to discourage consumption of goods that are destructive
to the social justice or environmental climate.
11. Support for Progressives in All Denominations
There are many progressives within Protestant denominations, Reform,
Reconstructionists, Conservative and Renewal Judaism, Islam, Catholicism,
Buddhism, Hinduism, and others. Many are trying to resist the assault of the
Right in their own religious communities. They often face a national
leadership that insists on ""unity" as the highest goal, pressuring
progressives to soft-pedal their own perspective (while the Right
continues to make headway by attacking the national denomination as
"too liberal"). NSP provides a place for people from different
religious communities to strategize together, and for people within the
same denomination or religion to meet outside the formal context of
their own community so that they can plan ways to coordinate their
activities and get mutual support.
12. Fundraising so that All These Efforts Can Reach Their Full Potential
We all know that the Religious Right has been powerful in
part because it has convinced millions of middle-income people to make
regular donations to their cause. Liberals and progressives have only
done this in a serious way for political candidates, but not for
building the intellectual, spiritual and media infrastructure that is
essential to launch an effective counter-movement to the Religious
Right. If you have skills or connections that could help us launch an
effective fund-raising drive, please work with us on this.
Here is how to Join:
To become a NSP member by using our secure online form, Click Here.
The Network of Spiritual Progressives (NSP) is an interfaith project of The Tikkun Community. We welcome spiritually alive people who are not connected with any faith, as well as those in existing spiritual or religious communities. Membership fees for the NSP are the same as membership fees for the Tikkun Community. If you are a current member of the Tikkun Community already, you don't have to pay twice to join the NSP project -- just drop us a note saying that you want to be included. Please note that magazine subscribers are NOT automatically members of the Tikkun Community however (though all Tikkun Community members get a complimentary subscription as one of the benefits of membership.)
We are an international community of people of many faiths calling for social justice and political freedom in the context of new structures of work, caring communities, and democratic social and economic arrangements. We seek to influence public discourse in order to inspire compassion, generosity, non-violence and recognition of the spiritual dimensions of life.



