The Federal Council of Churches was active in the
Temperance and
Prohibition of alcohol movements. Additionally, the council was an organization that believed very deeply in democracy. In its statement on the nature and tasks of Christian Cooperation, the Council declared: :With the demand for
industrial democracy the churches are intensely concerned, for democracy is the expression of Christianity.
The Social Creeds "The Social Creed of the Churches" was a statement by members of the Federal Council of Churches in December 1908 against what it described as "industrial problems." The document spelled out a list of principles, including: • Equal rights and complete justice for all men in all stations of life • Protection of the worker from dangerous machinery, occupational disease, injuries, and mortality • Abolition of child labor • Regulation of the conditions of toil for women as shall safeguard the physical and moral health of the community • A living wage as a minimum in every industry • Provision for the old age of the workers and for those incapacitated by injury • Abatement of poverty Over time the Council included additional principles, including addressing the injustice of the unequal distribution of wealth. Critics attacked the Federal Council of Churches as a front for communism. ==Member denominations==