OCCI Office of Social Justice

OCCI Office of Social Justice The Office of Social Justice in the Old Catholic Churches International.

06/09/2026
04/13/2026

Statement of the Old Catholic Churches International on President Trump's Attack on Pope Leo XIV

Issued by the Right Reverend Greer Godsey, OSFoc, Presiding Bishop Greer Godsey

April 13, 2026

We have watched with grave concern as President Donald Trump launched a public attack tonight on Pope Leo XIV, calling the Holy Father "weak" and "terrible" and demanding that he "stop catering to the Radical Left." The cause of this attack is clear: Pope Leo called for peace. He asked that wars cease. He condemned the idolatry of force.

That is not weakness. That is the Gospel.

We do not share all things in common with the Roman Catholic Church. Our tradition is distinct, and our independence from Rome is long-established. But on this we have no ambiguity: a political leader who attacks the leader of the world's largest Christian communion because that leader dared to say "enough with war" has revealed something important about himself and about the values he serves. Those values are not the values of Jesus of Nazareth.

The Book of Isaiah is not a radical left document. The Sermon on the Mount is not soft on crime. The command to seek peace and pursue it is not a foreign policy failure. It is the Word of God.

We stand in solidarity with Pope Leo XIV's call for peace, for the protection of civilian life, and for the dignity of every human person caught in the crossfire of war. We call upon all Old Catholic faithful, all clergy, and all persons of good will to reject the weaponization of Christian language in service of military aggression, and to pray for the courage of those who speak truth to power at cost to themselves.

Pax et Bonum.

The Right Reverend Greer Godsey, OSFoc
Presiding Bishop, Old Catholic Churches International

03/31/2026

Suffocation By Design : Jeff Hood documents all eight nitrogen hypoxia executions and demands accountability for the torture of it all.

03/31/2026

Holy Tuesday : Eight nitrogen hypoxia executions. Consistent visible distress. And the state kept calling it humane. Questions...

03/31/2026

A Palm Sunday exploring Jesus's entry into Jerusalem, Pilate's trial, and Oscar Romero's witness — what it means when the poor cry Hosanna.

03/31/2026

A new documentary that follows Rev. Jeff Hood’s journey to advocate for Oklahoma death row prisoner Emmanuel Littlejohn will premiere this Friday, April 3, at St. Oscar Romero Old Catholic Church,…

Today is Transgender Day of Visibility. To every transgender person in our communities and beyond: we see you, we honor ...
03/31/2026

Today is Transgender Day of Visibility. To every transgender person in our communities and beyond: we see you, we honor you, and we love you.

Old Catholic Churches International stands today with our transgender siblings across the world — not in spite of our faith, but because of it.

We are deeply troubled by what we are witnessing. From state legislatures across the United States to national governments around the globe, transgender individuals are being targeted by an escalating wave of legislation designed to erase, exclude, and harm. These are not abstract policy debates. These are attacks on real people — people created by God, beloved by God, and deserving of every dignity that humanity can offer.

Our theology will not allow us to be silent.

The Old Catholic tradition has always insisted that the Church exists to serve humanity — not to police it. We hold to the ancient faith, and the ancient faith holds that every person bears the Imago Dei, the image of God. That image does not require government approval. It cannot be legislated away. It does not expire.

To our transgender members, friends, and neighbors: you are not a controversy. You are the Body of Christ. Your lives are sacred. Your identities are not errors to be corrected. Your presence in our communities is a gift.

To our bishops, clergy, deacons, and lay leaders serving across our jurisdictions: today is a day to speak plainly. Stand with your transgender parishioners. Make your parishes sanctuaries of dignity. Let no one who comes through your doors wonder whether they are welcome.

Old Catholic Churches International affirms the full humanity and sacred worth of every transgender person. That is not a political statement. It is a confession of faith.

🌐 myocci.org
📧 [email protected]

03/04/2026

PLEASE send all submissions to godseygreg at gmail dot com.

📣 Convergent Streams Magazine is BACK!

After a hiatus, the Independent Sacramental Movement's premier magazine is returning — and our comeback edition tackles one of the most pressing issues of our time.

🗂️ Theme: Immigration & The Christian Response The plight of immigrants in our society — and what our faith calls us to do.

We're bringing together clergy, laity, and voices from across all denominations to explore:
✦ The human reality of immigration
✦ Our scriptural and theological obligations
✦ The Christian response to policy, community, and compassion

📝 Submit your article, reflection, or essay by March 7, 2026 📬 Email submissions to: godseygreg at gmail dot com
📖 Release Date: March 23, 2026 🗓️ Cover Date: April · May · June 2026

All submissions are welcome — clergy and laity alike.

🔗 Find us on Amazon | Facebook

02/28/2026

Statement of Old Catholic Churches International on the War in Iran

No. 2026022801
February 28, 2026

The Old Catholic Churches International issues this statement in response to the major military attacks launched by the United States and Israel against Iran, and Iran’s retaliatory strikes that are now spreading fear and death across the region.

We speak first as pastors, to the faithful who are anxious, to families who are glued to the news, to veterans whose bodies remember what headlines sanitize, and to every person whose heart is breaking as the numbers of dead and wounded rise. The Church’s concern is not theoretical. It is flesh and blood, children, neighbors, and the poor who always pay first.

1) A strongly worded moral judgment: this escalation is a grave evil

OCCI condemns, in the strongest possible terms, this widening war and the predictable expansion of human suffering it brings. Whatever political justifications are offered, the reality on the ground is that war rapidly becomes its own logic, more strikes, more retaliation, more civilian terror, more burial, more hatred handed to the next generation.

As we have said before, the choice to “answer” atrocity or threat with missiles that cause further death and damage is also morally wrong, because it does not heal the underlying wounds and instead multiplies them.

2) The protection of civilians is not optional, it is a moral test

Reports already describe extensive attacks and retaliatory strikes across the region, with significant civilian casualties claimed and humanitarian response underway. Even when facts are contested in the fog of war, this much is certain: the moral burden to protect civilians is immediate, not “later,” and not “if convenient.”

We therefore call for an immediate cessation of hostilities, de-escalation by all parties, and an urgent return to diplomacy under legitimate international frameworks.

3) The Church rejects the lie that violence will end violence

Our own teaching warns that when we embrace violence to stop violence, we risk becoming what we claim to oppose. Christians are commanded to resist vengeance and the cycle of retaliation.

Holy Scripture is not silent:

“Blessed are the peacemakers.” (Matthew 5:9)
“Seek peace and pursue it.” (Psalm 34:14)
“They shall beat their swords into plowshares…” (Isaiah 2:4)

4) A warning against hatred and dehumanization

We also warn, pastorally and plainly, against the spiritual poison that always accompanies war: scapegoating, dehumanization, and calls for collective punishment. Christians must not treat Iranian civilians, Jewish communities, Muslim communities, or anyone else as targets for blame, harassment, or violence. The Gospel does not permit it, and the Church will not excuse it.

5) Call to action for the faithful and all people of goodwill

Prayer: Pray for the people of Iran, Israel, and all nations now being drawn into this conflict. Pray for civilians, refugees, the wounded, and the dead. Pray for leaders to repent of violence and choose the hard work of peace.

Advocacy: Contact your elected representatives to demand restraint, lawful accountability, humanitarian access, and a diplomacy-first course, rather than open-ended escalation.

Concrete mercy: Support reputable humanitarian relief and be prepared, as parishes, missions, and individuals, to help displaced families and those suffering trauma. The Church exists to make the Kingdom visible by protecting human dignity, especially when states and armies forget it.

Conclusion

Silence is not an option. The Church must never become accustomed to war, nor should the world accept the normalization of state violence as routine policy. We urge an immediate end to this escalation before it becomes a regional catastrophe that history will condemn and the poor will carry.

May the Lord of Peace guide the nations away from slaughter and toward repentance, restraint, and reconciliation.

+ The Right Rev. Gregory (Greer) Godsey, OSFoc
Presiding Bishop, Old Catholic Churches International

Address

118 Frances Drive
North Augusta, SC
29841

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when OCCI Office of Social Justice posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share