Wayne Martin Mellinger, Ph.D.
We believe that all people are intimately connected in what Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
called an “inescapable network of mutuality.” The well-being of each of us is tied to the
well-being of the whole. Our faiths—Christian, Jewish, Buddhist, Muslim, Hindu, Pagan,
Humanist, and others—teach us that relationships define our lives, that every person
has dignity, and that the earth itself sustains us as a common home. Out of this vision,
we commit ourselves to organizing for justice, compassion, and beloved community.
As people of faith, we acknowledge our responsibility for the state of the world. Our
traditions call us to act, knowing that our choices and commitments can make a
difference in repairing what is broken.
We listen deeply to the cries of those who suffer—workers exploited in their labor,
immigrants denied dignity, unhoused neighbors left without shelter, and communities of
color enduring structural racism. Bearing witness is both a spiritual discipline and a
moral imperative.
We gather information carefully, listening not only to those we serve but also to those
with whom we disagree. To confront injustice, we must understand it. Our faiths call us
to confront ignorance with truth, and tyranny with conscience. Listening even to
adversaries stretches us beyond ourselves and reveals the depth of our moral
commitments.
Grounded in congregations, neighborhoods, and communities, we engage in grassroots
organizing. We empower marginalized voices to speak for themselves, to act
collectively, and to transform the structures that deny justice. This organizing is not
charity but solidarity—building people power to change systems.
Across our diverse traditions, we affirm shared values—justice, compassion, dignity,
24 September 2024
love—and strive to live them out daily. The “revolution” is not only in what we demand of
society but in how we conduct ourselves now. We embody the Beloved Community by
prefiguring it in our own practices of welcome, hospitality, and solidarity.
Our communities exercise prophetic critique, naming what is broken in our
world—racism, economic inequality, ecological destruction. And we practice prophetic
envisioning, imagining how it should be: a Beloved Community marked by justice,
compassion, and sustainability. This dual prophetic work both unmasks systems of
oppression and energizes us with hope.
We move beyond charity toward strategic, collective, and nonviolent direct action. Our
campaigns seek to transform root structures of oppression—unjust wages,
discriminatory laws, exploitative economies. In these actions, we embody our faith
values: justice, mercy, nonviolence, and joy. We also allow room for creativity and
celebration—because joy sustains struggle.
Through prayer, meditation, worship, and reflection, we reconnect with the Sacred
(however we each name it). These practices renew our spirits, clarify our intentions, and
help us discern next steps. Reflection is not separate from action but interwoven,
providing feedback loops that strengthen our organizing.
We remember always that we are bound together—not just with one another but with
the broader web of life. Our work is to serve the common good, resist the pull of ego,
and honor the dignity of every life.
This model is not a step-by-step recipe but a living framework. It mirrors the cycles of
nature and the spiritual cycles of our faith traditions: action and reflection, struggle and
renewal, critique and vision. By grounding our work in these principles, CLUE–Santa
Barbara embodies a practical theology of justice that unites diverse faith communities in
the shared labor of healing our world.
CLUE Santa Barbara