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We value not only the persons of a city but the city itself,
a place ofrefuge and grace for many. Structures that are efficient and
just are
gifts of common grace for all. We see that healthy persons develop from
healthy families, and healthy families benefit from healthy communities,
where people are nurtured and cared for. We are committed to a theology
that is both creative and redemptive, for persons as well as places, and
so we seek the spiritual renewal of persons and the social renewal of
places.

We care about the successful and the powerful in our
cities, but in the Bible we also notice God's unrelenting concern for
those who are poor, widowed, migrant, sick, in prison, alien, homeless
or otherwise victimized. Cities have become the catch-basin of those at-risk.
The Council of Leadership Foundations commits itself to the leadership
of the city but always in partnership with the vulnerable who are "equally
sinful but more often sinned against."

The biblical Gospel does not patronize but frees and
empowers. Persons are not only delivered from bondage to sin and guilt,
but processes are stimulated that lead to freedom from oppressive and
unjust public or private structures. We resist attempts to reduce the
Gospel's significance to only personal piety or programs that keep people
powerless or dependent. The Council of Leadership Foundations calls the
powerful to partnership with the vulnerable, so that the Gospel has equal
and full effect on both groups.

We strongly affirm this beautiful, old theological
term, and are committed to partnership and networks in ministry. We believe
it takes the whole family of God to embrace the whole faith of God, and
are scandalized by separations, bigotry, elitism and destructive competition.
The Cross transcends race, gender, denominations, and the power of the
Gospel is in linking arms rather than pointing fingers. And so we will
engage people of Faith to work with people of good will for the well-being
of the city.
We may be called to stand with those with whom we may only partially agree
on matters of faith so as to effect a Christian presence in society. The
Council of Leadership Foundations will work to bring together urban and
suburban, protestant and catholic, mainline and evangelical as well as
anglos and non-anglos.

The exploding impact of the phenomenon of urbanization will require creative
vision and bold initiative from individuals, churches and other institutions
if renewal of persons and cities is to take place. We are not impressed
by or committed to the status quo but believe that church leadership must
engage in serious R&D in order to discover more effective means of
having Christ's presence seen and felt in the city. This will take courage
and an innovative spirit, as we seek the priority of the Kingdom of God
over institutionalism.

We take leadership in urban life very seriously. As the best equipped
and brightest seem to exit the city neighborhoods, the needs grows larger.
The model of Christ-like leadership is affirmed as a value. Servant leadership
on the part of the influential as well as the vulnerable is the leadership
we wish to affirm and build --transformational leadership characterized
by openness to change, personal growth and strong faith.
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