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CHURCH WORLDWIDE: Christians in the Middle East: U.S. Attack on Syria Would Be Detrimental

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As the Obama administration considers a strike in response to recent chemical attacks, the head of a global evangelical group said last week that Christians in the Middle East oppose military intervention in Syria.

ā€œThere is major consensus amongst the Christian leaders in this region that any military intervention would have a detrimental effect . . . on Christians in Syria,ā€ wrote Geoff Tunnicliffe, secretary general/CEO of World Evangelical Alliance, in a letter to the State Department, the White House, and the United Nations Security Council.

Tunnicliffe was attending a meeting of Christian leaders in neighboring Jordan that included California mega church pastor Rick Warren, ā€œTouched by an Angelā€ actress Roma Downey, and her ā€œSurvivorā€ creator husband, Mark Burnett.

The group, convened by Jordanā€™s King Abdullah II, met with about 70 Middle Eastern Christians to discuss the challenges facing Arab Christians.

ā€œI couldnā€™t find a Christian leader at the conference who supported military intervention,ā€ Tunnicliffe said in an interview. ā€œThe question is, how do you protect Christians if thereā€™s a regime change?ā€

Tunnicliffe said that two Syrian pastors told him independently that Christians have received threats from those who say a regime change would mean a takeover by Islamists who would force Christians out of the country.

Christian representatives from Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and Jordan were present at the gathering, as well as a few Muslim clerics and academics. In his address, King Abdullah urged interfaith harmony.

ā€œWe are proud that Jordan constitutes a unique model of coexistence and fraternity between Muslims and Christians,ā€ the king said. ā€œWe also believe that the protection of the rights of Christians is a duty rather than a favor.ā€

U.S. and French leaders say Basher al-Assadā€™s Syrian government used chemical weapons in a Damascus suburb on Aug. 21, killing 1,429 people, including more than 400 children. In talks on military intervention, President Obama has won the support of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, but faces significant opposition among religious and political leaders.

New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan wrote to President Obama, urging him to shun military options, saying an attack ā€œwill be counterproductive, will exacerbate an already deadly situation, and will have unintended negative consequences.ā€

Dolan, the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, and Bishop Richard Pates of Des Moines, Iowa, chairman of the bishopsā€™ international affairs committee, pushed the White House to ā€œwork urgently and tirelesslyā€ for a ceasefire.

While she did not address Syria specifically in her presentation at the conference in Jordan, Downey noted her Catholic upbringing and her husbandā€™s Protestant background and the tension between these groups in her native Northern Ireland.

ā€œOur marriage is a living example of tolerance and healing, and of not allowing old hurts and discrimination to live on,ā€ said Downey, who with her husband produced ā€œThe Bibleā€ miniseries for The History Channel.

ā€œWe have come to believe that Christian unity is a critical element in responding to the global challenges we face today, including the difficulties of Arab Christians in the Middle East.ā€

Warren, who has been largely absent from the national and international scene since his sonā€™s suicide in April, moderated a panel at the conference.

Tunnicliffe said that evangelical leaders are discussing future statements on intervention in Syria.

ā€œI know people are aware of the crisis,ā€ Tunnicliffe said, noting that the Middle East is overwhelmed with 2 million refugees from Syria. ā€œIā€™m not sure theyā€™re aware of the extent of the crisis.ā€

Pope Francis and King Abdullah met at the Vatican last week, saying that dialogue is the ā€œonly optionā€ to end the conflict in Syria.

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