2FP Blog

Nuclear Weapons

Hiroshima Day August 6th, 2010

In the summer of 1945, sixty five years ago today, an American B-29 bomber dropped an atomic weapon named “little boy” on Japan, leveling a city and killing approximately 140,000 Japanese. On this 65th anniversary of Hiroshima, more than a billion Christians will simultaneously remember a culminating event in the life of Jesus Christ, as today also marks the great Feast of the Transfiguration of Christ.

In today’s Huffington Post, I offer a Meditation on Hiroshima and the Transfiguration:

“It must be one of the extraordinary accidents of history that the first atomic bomb was dropped on August 6, which marks the annual Feast of the Transfiguration for Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Orthodox Christians around the world. […] Roughly nineteen centuries [after the Transfiguration event], and sixty-five years ago today, the city of Hiroshima was destroyed with elements that cannot but recall the Transfiguration: a sun-bright white light; a roar from heaven; a cloud; terror; and-most of all-a world that would never be the same…” [link]

To commemorate the 65th anniversary of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Time Magazine has never before seen photographs. The bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki remain the source of deep controversy in America. Yet, as I wrote last year in Christianity Today, even those who would seek to legitimize the bombings within the context of World War II should not use them as barriers to disarmament in our day.

Yours,

Tyler

Reduce the Danger of Nuclear War and Help Feed Hungry Kids November 24th, 2009

Nowadays  everyone’s talking about nuclear disarmament.  The Queen of England, George Shultz, President Obama, Dwight from The Office (Don’t believe me?  Check Rainn’s Wilson’s twitter feed).

We at the Two Futures Project couldn’t be happier.  We believe that the sooner Americans wake up to the incredible dangers of nuclear weapons, the sooner moral people of all political persuasions will band together and get rid of these dangerous weapons once and for all.

The thing is, even though nuclear weapons are on the public’s mind more than ever, Congress hasn’t really caught up. Sure, they have plenty of other important issues to worry about, but we know that unless our elected leaders are on board, it’s going to be a lot harder reaching our end goal — a world free of nuclear weapons.

In recent years, though, there haven’t been a lot of vehicles for Congressional action. That changed last spring, when two Congressmen from opposite sides of the aisle — Representative Jim McGovern (D-MA) and Rep. Dwight Lungren (R-CA) — got together and crafted a bill that not only paves the way toward necessary reductions in our nation’s nuclear arsenal, but also — wait for it — redirects a good chunk of that spending toward efforts to curb global hunger and help child survival.

The Global Security Priorities Resolution (H.Res. 278) is a bipartisan bill that calls for reducing U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals to 1500 warheads per side — with the resulting savings split between efforts to combat nuclear terrorism and programs that encourage global child survival.

What’s not to like?  We already know that the weapons that are being reduced are unnecessary, and the money saved — which adds up to 13 billion annually — will go straight toward efforts to promote nuclear security and make sure that more kids around the world grow up to see adulthood.

That’s why the bill has been endorsed by, among others:

- President Reagan’s top arms control official
- the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops
- Lutheran World Relief
- World Vision

Aside from its obvious merits, Two Futures Project is supporting the bill because it’s a great way to help build bipartisan support for the arms reduction treaty currently being negotiated between the U.S. and Russia, which is a critical step toward a world without nuclear weapons.
To succeed, the Global Security Priorities Resolution needs 25 Members of Congress to sign on as co-sponsors. Earlier in November, each Member got a letter from the main sponsors, Reps. Jim McGovern (D-MA) and Dan Lungren (R-CA), asking that they join them. But so far, only 15 out of 435 have signed on! It’s clear that we, the voters, are the only ones who can make sure that this gets the attention it deserves.

We know that everyone’s busy preparing for Thanksgiving. But if you’re able to take fifteen minutes or less (maybe while your pumpkin pie is cooking) you can make a critical difference in spreading the word to Congress.

Click here to send a quick email to your Congressperson urging them to cosponsor this critically important bill.

If you’d like to learn more about the Global Security Priorities Act by watching a quick homemade video, visit 2FP’s November Priorities Campaign.

In a recent Rolling Stone piece, Bono talked about “vision over visibility” — the urgent need “to look past what you can see in favor of what can be.”

Working toward a nuclear weapons free world will take vision.  But reminding Congress that the first step toward that vision needs to start now?  That only takes fifteen minutes.  And one click . . . right here.

This post was published on Sojourners God’s Politics Blog in November of 2009.

A Merciful White Flash April 29th, 2008

In an article for Christianity Today in 2008, Tyler explains his personal conversion to Christianity.

It hit me, then, in the middle of a busy hotel hallway: As the summer had proceeded, I had unconsciously distracted myself from saving the world with a more actionable to-do list. Because I couldn’t do anything about that consuming lunch-time vision, couldn’t shut Satan up, I’d focused instead on getting this speaker for the conference, cultivating that organizational partner, getting yet another signature on yet another petition. But now, all at once, I was struck with the fruitlessness of all the work that had filled my days, and would fill any foreseeable future. My contentment peeled like paint.

Emotionally and spiritually exhausted, and suddenly confronted with my personal futility, I found my way to a service stairwell, sat on a step, and broke down. I don’t know how long I was there before I heard the voice, and I don’t remember whether it was audible or mental. What I do know beyond a shadow of a doubt is that I wasn’t talking to myself, because it was speech that carried its own irresistible consolation.

God said: The world is not yours, not to save or damn. Only serve the One whose it is.

Read the article in its entirety here.