November 22nd, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

Southern Baptists to gather in Kentucky


(Louisville, Ky.) Southern Baptists leaders are asking followers to put aside squabbles over political and social issues and look inward at a time when the nation’s largest Protestant denomination is hoping to stop declining membership.

Leaders hope that energizing missionary efforts can help, and plan to focus on that at the group’s annual meeting in Louisville beginning Tuesday.

“We are not a political organization,” Jonathan Merritt, a Baptist pastor from Georgia and son of a former Southern Baptist Convention president, said in an e-mail message. “Too often the evangelical movement has been distracted from our primary purpose by divisive political issues.”

The convention has long made headlines for heated debates, dating back to power struggles in the 1970s and 1980s between moderates and conservatives that ended when moderates dropped out of SBC politics in the early 1990s. Over the last decade, the convention has taken positions opposing women pastors and gay rights.

“It’s not to negate that we care about those other issues,” said Daniel Akin, president of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest, N.C. “Indeed we rightly have deep convictions about abortion, a growing concern for the poor, a growing concern for healthy marriages and families. But we’re convinced the gospel of Jesus Christ is the answer to all those things.”

Convention president Johnny Hunt has said he hoped the annual meeting would steer away from national issues, like statements concerning the policies of President Obama’s administration.

Hunt told the Baptist Press in May that though Obama’s agenda gives many Christians “heartburn,” he wishes “we would spend more time focusing on our health.” Hunt declined to be interviewed for this story.

A failure to aggressively attract minorities has hurt Southern Baptist recruitment numbers, said David Key, director of Baptist studies at Emory University’s Candler School of Theology in Atlanta.

An important indicator for the health of the denomination is new baptisms, which fell in 2008 for the fourth straight year to 342,198, a 1 percent drop and the lowest level since 1987, according to Lifeway Christian Resources, the publishing arm of the Nashville-based Southern Baptist Convention. Total membership of about 16.2 million was flat over the same period, falling by 38,482, or 0.2 percent.

Key said Southern Baptists are starting to realize they’re “vulnerable and not immune from the decline (in baptisms and membership) the way they always thought they were. Like a lot of mainline Protestant denominations, all of a sudden they’re facing the same stagnation issues.”

Even with the emphasis on evangelism, the convention won’t escape politics altogether.

Already one resolution proposed by a black Texas pastor, the Rev. Dwight McKissic, is asking the denomination to acknowledge the historical importance of Obama’s electoral victory despite the convention’s opposition to his policies.

“The odds are overwhelming that there will be a resolution on President Obama,” said Akin, chairman of the committee that forwards resolutions to the floor for a vote.

But Akin said the committee, appointed by Hunt, would attempt to steer away from divisive political subjects.

Recent SBC annual meetings have embraced such topics, including a boycott of The Walt Disney Co. for offering domestic partner benefits to gay employees, a definition of gender roles that prohibit women from being pastors while calling for wives to “submit” to husbands and even disapproval of allowing members who drink to serve in leadership positions.

“I don’t think one should expect a lot of flamboyant kind of resolutions (this year) that are just kind of all over the map and addressing all sorts of issues,” Akin said.

Hunt has asked members to focus on a mission statement-style document crafted by Akin urging Baptists to put aside differences and focus on rebuilding North American and international missions. The document, “Toward A Great Commission Resurgence” has more than 3,500 signers on a Web site where it is posted.

It also has stirred up internal controversy because of a section that calls for re-examining the national convention structure, including a goal to “maximize our resources” for mission work and eliminate “overlap and duplication of ministries.”

Akin argues in the document for “more faithful stewardship of the funds” given by local churches and state conventions to the SBC’s Cooperative Program, which supports worldwide missions.

“I do think a lot of folks would like to see more of our monies that are given through the Cooperative Program making their way to the international mission fields,” he said.

But dissenters worry that a structural change could weaken the state conventions.

The document will be the “hot topic” at the two-day convention, predicts Wade Burleson, a high-profile Baptist pastor from Enid, Okla.


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  • REBEL Comx Said: June 22nd, 2009 at 9:01 am
    • Kentucky Fried Bigot anyone?

  • ForReal Said: June 20th, 2009 at 3:54 pm
    • “healthy marriages and family” is just more CODE like “Family Values” that the ACT (American Christian Taliban) are going to use to cover up their Hate and Bigotry… again, if marriage is so great and important to them, why don’t they BAN divorce in the Hetero ACT community?

  • Todd Said: June 20th, 2009 at 3:04 pm
    • And this is a gay issue WHY????? If we don’t give it credence, then it won’t take our thoughts to the negative side. They are meeting, surprise, surprise…doing their best to say that they don’t HATE! And that is all they are…a bunch of HATE and FEAR filled people…Have a GREAT TIME!!!

  • Trace Said: June 20th, 2009 at 7:38 am
    • Living in Georgia, I can assure you that Southern Baptists can not be trusted. They want to intrude upon every aspect of EVERYONE’S life.

      I find it interesting that they are reshaping their speech in order to deceive people that may fall into their trap.

      Just as the far left has changed the name of Global Warming to “Global Climate Change” it seems that the Southern Baptist’s are reshaping anti-gay marriage to “a growing concern for healthy marriages and families.”

      I really hope that no one falls for this “kinder/gentler Southern Baptist’s.”

  • Michael Said: June 20th, 2009 at 2:56 am
    • Perhaps if they stopped trying to impose their religious beliefs on the rest of America, they could stem the decline in membership. The problem is that more and more Americans realize that homophobia is a sin. In fact, it’s so unnatural that no member of the animal kingdom even engages in it.

  • ForReal Said: June 20th, 2009 at 1:23 am
    • guess what i never understood is if jesus was “god” and so smart, why didnt he just write what he wanted us to know himself? why has MAN written 50 plus years after his death what he SUPPOSEDLY said? hmmm.

      the myteries. i wonder if the tooth fairy is green or a lil white chick with red eyes and blue hair? who knows. pff.

  • David W Said: June 20th, 2009 at 1:12 am
    • You know it’s funny all the other Protestant Christian Churches kicked out the Ku Klux Klan out of their denomination, except one. Hmmm. The KKK keeps bragging they have people in all walks of life. The best place to hide is in the obvious. Makes you wonder when Southern Baptist is going to clean house? North American Baptist don’t have that problem. I got my northern eyes open in a little town in the mid west. 8 of the deacons were KKK, and the 9th was freemason. I was an assistant deacon.

  • Wayne M. Said: June 19th, 2009 at 10:43 pm
    • Dan: It is clear from the information you have given that while the religious right is quite homophobic, people of faith in general, INCLUDING CHRISTIANS, are our allies. We will not fight religious bigotry by being anti-religious bigots. We will fight religious bigotry by working with our religious allies. We must fight all bigotry to end homophobia.

  • Rob Said: June 19th, 2009 at 7:55 pm
    • Tax the fuckers.

  • Dan Said: June 19th, 2009 at 4:48 pm
    • Since the subject of religion has come up, I’ll post some results from the huge Pew Center survey released at the end of March. I posted this some time ago, but it was so far down in the comment section that most people wouldn’t have seen it.

      Is all religion pretty much the same, or is it diverse? What do religious people think about homosexuality, or does it vary from group to group? The survey included this question: do you think homosexuality should be accepted or discouraged by society?

      According to the survey, 56% of mainline Protestants and 58% of Catholics think homosexuality should be accepted. That’s compared with the national average of 50% for all Americans. Only 40% of all Americans think homosexuality should be discouraged.

      Of the few Orthodox Christians, only 48% think homosexuality should be accepted. However, even fewer at 37% think it should be discouraged. Evangelicals, Mormons, and the few Jehovah’s Witnesses also are unlikely to think it should be accepted: 26%, 24%, and a tiny 12% for Jehovah’s Witnesses.

      Of the small Other Christians group, 69% think it should be accepted. Historically Black churches are at 39%, vs. a somewhat larger 46% who think it should be discouraged.

      Large majorities of Jews, Buddhists, and Other Faiths think homosexuality should be accepted: 79%, 82%, and 84%. Unaffiliated Americans are also likely to think homosexuality should be accepted: 71%. This group includes atheists.

      Hindus are at 48%, but that’s compared with just 37% who think it should be discouraged. Results for Muslims were unavailable. The report shows Muslim acceptance at only 27%, but it turns out that this figure was from a 2007 survey. All the other results are apparently current.

      Remember, Americans are MUCH more likely to support gay rights than to think homosexuality should be accepted. For example, 67% supported same-sex marriage or civil unions in an April CBS/NY Times poll. That’s 42% for marriage (a 9% increase in one month) and 25% for civil unions. In the Pew Center survey, 58% of evangelicals aged 18 to 29 supported same-sex marriage or civil unions.

      Pretty encouraging results :)

  • R & R Said: June 19th, 2009 at 4:42 pm
    • The Christian Taliban Republic of the U.S.A.

  • dr. bob Said: June 19th, 2009 at 4:30 pm
    • The “cultural” war is between radical right wing christians and their Bible, vs. the Constitution and State Rights. Not a fundamental Christian Nation, but rather a Republic of Laws, these bigots continue their theocratic takeover of whats becoming a fascist non separation of church and state. Their goal is to erase homosexuality, because THEY SEEMS TO THINK THEY HAVE GOD ON THEIR SIDE and establish a church state. They are DANGEROUS .

 
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