Quite an interesting story. What are we to think?
http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=35600
Moderator: William Thornton
Alan Carter wrote:Quite an interesting story. What are we to think?
http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=35600
Alan Carter wrote:Here is a link to the first account on Baptist Press. Its a little different.
http://www.bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=35736
I especially like this quote by Wright: "The hateful rhetoric of some professing believers has tarnished the reputation of other Christians, Wright said."
Perhaps we as Baptists should spend a bit more time looking in the mirror before we head out to work.
"We're a coalition of groups asking the SBC to acknowledge and apologize for the damage that the convention has done to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people," Jack McKinney, a heterosexual married man told Wright at the beginning of the meeting. McKinney is a spokesperson for Faith in America and a former Southern Baptist minister. McKinney and the other leaders repeatedly made parallels between racism and a stance against homosexuality. Sixteen years ago to the day, McKinney said, Southern Baptists passed a resolution apologizing for past racism.
"We feel like the convention is making the same mistake in the way it has demonized LGBT people," said McKinney, who handed Wright a packet of 10,000 signatures. "We come today to ask for an apology for that and for a pledge that those kinds of teachings would come to an end."
Wright, sitting at a roundtable with McKinney and four of the other leaders, rejected the parallels.
"Obviously, we don't feel that there can be an apology for teaching sexual purity," Wright, pastor of Johnson Ferry Baptist Church in Marietta, Ga., said. "As followers of Christ, our only authority for practicing our faith is Scripture, is the Word of God.... As followers of Christ it would be very difficult for us to betray our faith by ignoring what God says about sexual purity."
The Bible condemns both homosexual sex and heterosexual sex that is outside the bonds of marriage, Wright said.
When I think of Baptist Distinctives, I think of this acronymic list:Alan wrote:Well, let's see. In Texas we have semi-Baptist churches that are "lightly Baptist" or "barely Baptist" meaning that barely subscribe to those things which make Baptists distinctive. Usually they laugh at inerrancy, have women pastors and deacons, social drink, and usually are more welcoming of gay members than the more traditional Baptist churches. I would consider Royal Lane Baptist Church and Wilshire Baptist Church to be semi-Baptist and First Baptist and Prestonwood to be more traditional. In regards to gay folks, FBC and Prestonwood are much more homophobic than any others I know of in our region.
- Biblical Authority
- Autonomy of the Local Church
- Priesthood of All Believers
- Two Ordinances
- Individual Soul Competence
- Saved Church Membership
- Two Offices
- Separation of Church and State
I see nothing in this list that pertains to sex, though. Neither gender (or marital status) of officers nor orientation (or marital status) of members is addressed. Clearly a major lacuna in the acronymic foresight of our forebears.Alan Carter wrote:I agree with what you are saying but I only know of two semi-Baptist churches in Dallas that welcome and affirm. Most in the pew Baptists cannot bring themselves to honestly and openly welcome gay people. They have started their own churches but if I am understanding you correctly, you are saying that they need to start their own churches where homosexuality and gayness are considered sins and preached against. That probably isn't going to happen but at least the thought is there.
At least we're all talking and that should prove helpful in the days to come.
Haruo wrote:When I think of Baptist Distinctives, I think of this acronymic list:Alan wrote:Well, let's see. In Texas we have semi-Baptist churches that are "lightly Baptist" or "barely Baptist" meaning that barely subscribe to those things which make Baptists distinctive. Usually they laugh at inerrancy, have women pastors and deacons, social drink, and usually are more welcoming of gay members than the more traditional Baptist churches. I would consider Royal Lane Baptist Church and Wilshire Baptist Church to be semi-Baptist and First Baptist and Prestonwood to be more traditional. In regards to gay folks, FBC and Prestonwood are much more homophobic than any others I know of in our region.
- Biblical Authority
- Autonomy of the Local Church
- Priesthood of All Believers
- Two Ordinances
- Individual Soul Competence
- Saved Church Membership
- Two Offices
- Separation of Church and State
While for some Baptists Biblical Authority has been supplanted by Biblical Inerrancy, for others it has not. Doesn't make either group less baptist. For those who hold to the foot-washing ordinance or who have an office of elder distinct from pastor and deacon, they're in luck, since "Three" upholds the distinctive as well as "Two" does. For those determined to make convention membership a must, I suppose "Associational Principle" could be substituted for "Autonomy". Or for those who think Welch's is more important than freedom, I suppose "Abstinence from Intoxicating Communion Wine" could be substituted for "Autonomy".I see nothing in this list that pertains to sex, though. Neither gender (or marital status) of officers nor orientation (or marital status) of members is addressed. Clearly a major lacuna in the acronymic foresight of our forebears.
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