However, social justice crowds out other concerns. For instance, some in my congregation want to forego remodeling our building in order to fight climate change. This group takes the moral high ground because they claim if energy and resources are focused on the building, the congregation will not have the energy to address the climate emergency. Those in favor of remodeling also take the moral high ground, claiming our current space decreases our ability to live our mission. Meanwhile, there are people in the congregation who are excluded from its programs because they can’t climb stairs or breathe the polluted indoor air.
As Carolyn Zaikoski points out, you have to be able bodied to be a good activist. http://everydayfeminism.com/2016/09/social-justice-activism-ableist/ Activists have to be able to go to events in inaccessible spaces and to participate in public protests. So why should a congregation expend its limited resources for the disabled if its mission is to be social activists?
Wheezers, geezers, and gimps! Who needs ‘em?