ABC, CBF in on formation of new ecumenical effort_22304

Posted: 2/27/04

ABC, CBF in on formation of new ecumenical effort

By John Pierce

Baptists Today

ATLANTA (ABP)—Leaders of the American Baptist Churches in the USA and the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship say they are excited about potential opportunities for formal dialogue with other U.S. Christians, including Roman Catholics, Orthodox, Protestants, Evangelicals and Pentecostals.

image_pdfimage_print

Posted: 2/27/04

ABC, CBF in on formation of new ecumenical effort

By John Pierce

Baptists Today

ATLANTA (ABP)—Leaders of the American Baptist Churches in the USA and the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship say they are excited about potential opportunities for formal dialogue with other U.S. Christians, including Roman Catholics, Orthodox, Protestants, Evangelicals and Pentecostals.

Both Baptist groups’ governing bodies are taking steps toward becoming founding members of Christian Churches Together in the USA. A much broader fellowship than the current National Council of Churches, CCT is seeking to embrace the widest range of Christian communities.

“Our general board has authorized us to become a part of it officially,” said ABC General Secretary Roy Medley, adding final documents and cost estimates are still forthcoming.

“It will give us a place to have the spectrum of our family represented,” said Medley, noting American Baptists range from evangelical to liberal.

Unlike bodies that pass resolutions and take specific political positions, Medley said he is attracted to CCT’s conciliar approach. CCT “will be more about conversations and mutual knowledge of one another’s faith and traditions,” he predicted.

As a result, he added, a wide range of American Christians will likely participate. “That means that Roman Catholics and Evangelical Pentecostals will be involved.”

A CCT steering committee statement welcomes churches and national Christian organizations that “believe in the Lord Jesus Christ as God and Savoir according to the Scriptures; worship and serve the one God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit; and seek ways to work together in order to present a more credible Christian witness in and to the world.”

One unique characteristic of CCT is a consensus approach to decision making.

The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship’s Coordinating Council has voted to pursue participation in CCT. John Finley, pastor of First Baptist Church of Savannah, Ga., and a member of the CBF ecumenical task force, spoke in favor of a recommendation that the Fellowship “identify as a founding member.”

Daniel Vestal, CBF coordinator, urged support as well, saying he is impressed by the broad inclusiveness of CCT. “I’ve frankly been waiting for the emergence of some ecumenical body that fits CBF and in which we fit.”

CCT’s intention to include a wide spectrum of Christian communions is a unique and noble effort, Vestal said. He noted that the National Council of Churches lacks the involvement of Roman Catholics and many evangelicals, while the National Association of Evangelicals includes no other Christian traditions.

This is the most ambitious ecumenical effort ever put forth,” said Vestal.

CCT has loosely identified five “families”—Evangelical/Pentecostal, Historic Protestant, Historic Racial/Ethnic, Orthodox and Roman Catholic—to assure broad participation.

Focusing on dialogue is the only way to bring together such a broad spectrum of Christians, Medley said. “There is a real effort in this to keep everybody at the table.”

During a planning session in Texas in early January, participants were asked to gather by “families.” The challenge for Baptists may be in knowing exactly where they fit.

“I went to the Historic Protestant faith family,” Vestal told the coordinating council, “and Roy (Medley) went to the Evangelical one.”

The designation of these five families will not play a major role in CCT, but it simply assures wide participation, Medley said.

Regardless of how Baptists identify themselves among the broader Christian community in the United States, Medley said, the efforts of CCT connect well with the “longtime commitment of American Baptists to bridge denominational barriers and create an ability to work with others for the sake of the gospel.”

News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.


We seek to connect God’s story and God’s people around the world. To learn more about God’s story, click here.

Send comments and feedback to Eric Black, our editor. For comments to be published, please specify “letter to the editor.” Maximum length for publication is 300 words.

More from Baptist Standard