BAPTIST BRIEFS: Fatalities when car hits MercyMe bus.

Fatalities when car hits MercyMe bus. Two teenagers and an unborn baby were killed Aug. 8 when a car collided with a tour bus carrying the Christian band MercyMe at an intersection in Fort Wayne, Ind., and a third young adult died later. MercyMe had wrapped up a concert in Fort Wayne, and around 1:15 a.m. their bus was traveling through a green light when a car in an oncoming lane attempted a left turn in front of the bus. The driver, 18-year-old Kara Klinker, was nine months pregnant at the time, and her child was pronounced stillborn at a local hospital. The mother died several days after the accident. Two of the car’s passengers, Dario Boutte, 19, and Barbara Schmucker, 17, died of blunt-force trauma. The band and crew received minor cuts and bruises.

New Hope honored as Publisher of the Year. New Hope Publishers, the general trade publishing imprint for national Woman’s Missionary Union, was recognized as Publisher of the Year by the Advanced Writers and Speakers Association at its Golden Scrolls Banquet held on the eve of the International Christian Retail Show. This is the first time the Birmingham-based publisher received the honor. New Hope had been nominated for the award in years past and was a finalist last year.

Hawkins diagnosed with cancer. O.S. Hawkins, president of GuideStone Financial Resources of the Southern Baptist Convention, has been diagnosed with prostate cancer. In a statement released to leaders of SBC entities, Hawkins, 62, announced doctors had been monitoring his PSA count for months, and results from an Aug. 5 biopsy revealed the diagnosis. Surgery will be scheduled sometime after Sept. 7. “The prognosis is good, and hopefully we have found it early enough. We have reason to be encouraged at this point at this time,” Hawkins said. Hawkins became president in 1997 of GuideStone Financial Resources, the SBC entity that provides retirement, insurance and investment management products and services to churches, ministries, hospitals, educational and other institutions. Hawkins previously was pastor of First Baptist Church in Dallas four years and First Baptist Church in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., 15 years.

Wilson to lead congregational health center. Bill Wilson, pastor of First Baptist Church in Dalton, Ga., will become the chief executive of the North Carolina-based Center for Congregational Health, a nondenominational ministry that provides consultants and trained leaders to help churches become “healthier communities of faith.”  He assumes the post Sept. 21 after 33 years of local-church staff ministry in Georgia, Virginia and South Carolina. The center has been without permanent leadership since July 2007, when founder David Odom left to take the helm of the leadership-education program at Duke University Divinity School. Wilson has served as president of the Baptist General Association of Virginia and on the governing boards of a variety of Baptist organizations, including Associated Baptist Press, the Religious Herald, the University of Richmond, the Baptist Center for Ethics, the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty, Mercer University and Mercer’s McAfee School of Theology.




Varied testimonies touch on themes of faith, forgiveness, unity & inclusion

NORMAN, Okla.—The widow of a Christian who was martyred by Muslims in the Gaza Strip prays for revenge, her friend Hanna Massad told participants at the New Baptist Covenant regional meeting in Oklahoma. And her idea of revenge is seeing the perpetrators turn from Islam to faith in Christ.

Rami Ayyad, manager of Gaza’s only Christian bookstore, was abducted and executed Oct. 7, 2007, as he closed his shop, explained Massad, pastor of Gaza Evangelical Church.

Gaza is a narrow slice of land, 30 miles long by seven miles wide, between Israel and the Mediterranean Sea, and it is home to 1.5 million people, Massad said.

“We live between two fires—Israeli occupation and Muslim militancy,” he reported. Unemployment soars between 50 percent and 70 percent, and Massad’s church helps provide food to thousands of families, both Muslims and Christians.

Former President Jimmy Carter issued a renewed call for unity at the regional gathering of the New Baptist Covenant in Norman, Okla.

Ayyad was martyred because he would not renounce his faith, Massad said. When he was killed, he and his wife, Pauline, had two children, and she was pregnant.

“This is our faith: There is nothing Jesus cannot overcome, because he is the one who stands and says, ‘I am the resurrection and the life,’” Massad stressed.

Sympathetic Christians from other parts of the world often ask why the Gaza Christians must endure persecution and why their faith is tested, he said. The answer is simple: Because of persecution, “we are able to learn in ways we could not otherwise.”

One lesson Christians in Gaza are learning is how to practice forgiveness toward persecutors, he added. “You either allow bitterness to control you, or you pray to ask God to allow you to forgive.”

That’s difficult, Massad conceded, especially when Ayyad’s little children come to church without their father, and when Ayyad’s young son, George, asks, “Mama, where’s Daddy?”

But because of forgiveness she has found through Christ, Pauline Ayyad wishes an unconventional outcome for her husband’s executioners.

“This is my revenge,” she told Massad, “that those who murdered my husband would come to know the Lord.”

“Sooner or later, all of us will leave this world. What legacy will you leave?” Massad asked the  crowd. “Your brothers and sisters in the Middle East are stretching our arms to you, saying, ‘Come and help us.’”

Sarah Stewart, ministry resident at First Baptist Church in Oklahoma City, described the challenges she has faced as a woman answering God’s call to ministry within Baptist life.

Later at the New Baptist Covenant regional meeting, former President Jimmy Carter announced he plans to travel to Gaza soon “to let the world know what is happening to the people there.”

Carter, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, reported he has visited more than 125 countries since leaving the White House. And he expressed concern about the reputation of Christians worldwide.

“The pre-eminent impression is of Christians struggling with each other for positions of authority and who seem incapable of cooperating with each other,” he said. “Division is a cancer metastasizing in the body of Christ.”

Carter, one of the organizers of the initial New Baptist Covenant national meeting in Atlanta, Ga., last year and the subsequent regional gatherings this year, introduced himself as a seventh-generation Georgia Baptist and “the husband of the most active and most famous deacon” at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, Ga., his wife, Rosalynn.

But controversies about the role of women in the church—as well as different opinions about hot-button issues such as creationism, abortion, capital punishment and the separation of church and state—are secondary to the central gospel message that unites Baptist Christians, he emphasized.

“We are saved by the grace of God through faith in Jesus Christ,” he said, asking the crowd to repeat that simple gospel message.

Gov. Brad Henry, a longtime member of First Baptist Church in Shawnee, Okla., told the New Baptist Covenant participants he typically has shied away from sharing his Christian testimony publicly.

“My faith is intensely personal to me. I have too often seen public officials and politicians parade around, wearing their religion on their sleeves and using it as an excuse to judge others,” he said.

But in speaking to his fellow Baptists, Henry told how he accepted Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior at age 16 during a revival at Falls Creek Assembly in southern Oklahoma and was subsequently baptized at First Baptist Church in Shawnee.

In the years that followed, Henry served as a deacon, the teacher of a high school Sunday school class and as a missions volunteer on a trip to Ghana, distributing mosquito nets to combat malaria.

“My faith has sustained me,” he said, describing how one of his four daughters was born with a rare neuromuscular disease that led to her death at age 7 months.

During the final session of the two-day gathering, Sarah Stewart described the challenges she has faced as a woman answering God’s call to ministry within Baptist life. That calling came as the result of “a thousand small yeses” since accepting Christ as her Lord and Savior at age 8, she said.

“The drumbeat I hear is my Savior calling, ‘There is work to be done,’” said Stewart, ministry resident at First Baptist Church in Oklahoma City.

Experience ministering to youth, teaching and preaching within the context of a supportive congregation confirmed and clarified God’s calling on her life, she said.

“My calling came in the midst of community,” she said. “God used the church to affirm his calling on my life. I realized God created me to shepherd his people.”




Respect required for Baptist women in ministry, pastor insists

NORMAN, Okla.—A South-ern Baptist pastor from Oklahoma compared his fellow conservatives’ treatment of women in ministry to earlier generations’ treatment of African-Americans.

Love is the distinguishing mark of Christians—particularly how believers treat people with whom they disagree, said Wade Burleson, pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church in Enid, Okla. And for many Southern Baptists today, the real test comes regarding how they treat women in ministry.

“History will one day look back on how we Baptists in the 21st century treated our women who were called by God to minister. It is my prayer that conservative, Bible-believing men will not make the same mistake our Southern Baptist forefathers made when they remained quiet two centuries ago as another minority experienced abuse,” Wade Burleson told a regional gathering of the New Baptist Covenant.

Burleson, pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church in Enid, Okla., framed his message as a personal confession and a public challenge.

“I now believe in my heart that Jesus is more concerned with how we Baptists treat each other than he is what we Baptists teach each other. The people loved by Christ—particularly those who differ with me—are to be far more precious to me than any finer point of theology believed by me,” he said.

Burleson noted a recent address by California Baptist pastor Rick Warren to the Islamic Society of North America where Warren challenged Muslims and Christians to respect the dignity of every person by valuing, not just tolerating, people; restore civility to civilization; and protect freedom of speech and freedom of religion for all people.

Before Baptist Christians can begin to respond to Muslims in that way, Burleson said, they need to learn to treat their own Baptist brothers—and especially sisters—with that kind of respect.

“The greatest barometer for how well we Baptists understand the importance of agape love—which the Scriptures call the distinguishing mark of followers of Jesus Christ—is our treatment of each other,” he said.

In particular, Baptists who are serious about obeying Christ’s command to love one another must rise to defend women in ministry when other Baptists mistreat them, he emphasized.

“These women profess a call from God, show real evidence of being set apart by Christ and have experienced the empowerment of the Holy Spirit to proclaim Jesus Christ and him crucified to the world, yet many of them are being subjected to abuse—and that by Baptists,” Burleson said.

“When our Baptist women in ministry experience such personal mistreatment, ridicule or harm, we are commanded by Christ our Lord to bind up their wounds. And sometimes we must even take the weapon of abuse out of the hands of the perpetrators of those wounds.”

He pointed to specific instances of what he considered harsh and unjust treatment of women in ministry—Sheri Klouda, who was dismissed as a professor at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary; Julie Pen-nington-Russell, who faced protestors when she accepted the pastorate of Calvary Baptist Church in Waco; and a female seminary student whose preaching professor allowed all male students to leave the classroom when she spoke so they would not be subjected to hearing a woman preach.

Burleson, a past president of the Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma, particularly noted a turning point in his attitude toward the treatment of women. The incident occurred when he was moderating a state convention business session and a woman was elected second vice president.

“I will never forget the sight from the platform as several men throughout the auditorium stood and literally turned their backs to the platform as they voted against the first woman to be elected to general office within the Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma,” he recalled.

“That moment was an awakening for me. I realized that any cherished principle that would ever cause a Christian to be uncivil, unkind or unloving toward a sister in Christ is a principle that should be thrown out for the sake of obedience to the command of Christ to love one another.”

Not all Baptists will agree on the interpretation of Scriptures regarding the role of women in church leadership, but there is “no wiggle room” when it comes to Christ’s command to love, he said.

“You may not like the fact that women are now being called by God to preach, or called by God to do missions, or called by God to teach. You may even consider it a violation of your principles for a woman to teach a man, or preach Christ to a man, or baptize a man or lead a man, but there is one thing you and I cannot—we must not—forget,” Burleson said.

“You and I are called to love each other and every sister in Christ who feels called to ministry. We are called to affirm the dignity of every Christian woman called to minister. We are commanded to treat them with respect and civility.

“We are also called to love, respect and affirm the autonomy of local Baptist congregations and denominations that utilize these gifted women in ministry as they see fit. To censor them, reject them, abuse them or condemn their character is a sin of the first order.”




Former HMB president says NAMB merger was a mistake

CENTRALIA, Mo. (ABP) — Combining three Southern Baptist agencies into the North American Mission Board in 1995 was a bad idea, says the last president of one of the agencies.

Larry Lewis, president of the Home Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention from 1987 until his retirement at age 62 in 1996, said in an interview with a Baptist state newspaper that he had reservations from the beginning about a major restructuring of the denomination, but he didn't oppose it at the time because he didn't want to appear self-serving or not to be a "team player."

Lewis, 74, told North Carolina's Biblical Recorder Aug. 13 that "time has proven me right."

Much of NAMB's brief history has been marked by turmoil. Its first president, former Virginia pastor Bob Reccord, resigned in 2006 amid allegations of mismanagement and lavish spending.

Reccord's successor, Geoff Hammond, and three close associates resigned Aug. 11 after Hammond clashed with leaders of NAMB's board of trustees and accusations of low morale among some of the 279 employees who work at the agency's headquarters in Alpharetta, Ga.

Lewis said the decision to pull the former SBC Radio and Television Commission in Fort Worth, and the SBC Brotherhood Commission in Memphis, Tenn., under the same umbrella with home missions "eliminated or marginalized some of our most productive entities."

"It was a step backwards," Lewis said.

Merger might have been political  

Lewis said he has been told that the real reason behind the reorganization was that leaders of the "conservative resurgence" were displeased with him because he wasn't aggressive enough about weeding out what they viewed as vestiges of liberalism at the HMB, but they didn't want to fire him because they had supported his election and he affirmed biblical inerrancy. The solution, the story goes, was to reorganize the agency in a way that didn't leave a place for Lewis.

"I would hate to think that is true," Lewis said, "but it may well be."

Lewis said some people who supported his election as HMB president expected a "wholesale purging" of staff after he took office, but his philosophy was to keep a worker unless the person was "obviously liberal."

"Frankly, we never dismissed anyone because of their theological position," he said, although some who disagreed with his theology left on their own.

Lewis, a former church planter and college president, said he tried to be a reconciler and believed that much of the splintering in the SBC could have been avoided if conservatives offered political moderates who were theologically conservative a place at the table.

He said he is proud, for example, that he secured for his board the nomination of Richard Jackson, a self-described inerrantist from Phoenix who lost credibility among the resurgence leaders when he allowed moderates to run him — unsuccessfully — as their candidate for SBC president against Jerry Vines in 1988.

"My love and respect for a brother in Christ is not predicated on his agreeing with me," Lewis said.

"We made every effort possible to depoliticize the process in appointing missionaries and hiring staff," he said.

Leadership problems predate merger 

Two long-time former HMB employees told the Biblical Recorder that leadership problems at the agency predate the formation of NAMB by decades. They and other observers said the agency actually has not enjoyed a steady hand at the leadership helm since Arthur Rutledge, who led the HMB from 1965 until his retirement a few months before his death in 1976.

Don Hammonds, who retired in 1997 as interim vice president and worked during the full terms of both Lewis and his predecessor, Bill Tanner, said there is "no doubt" that Rutledge was "hands down the strongest executive" ever at the HMB.

Unlike some of his successors, who had a reputation of wanting to do things their own way, Hammonds said Rutledge "got people who knew something about what they were asked to do and he let them do it."

"He trusted his staff," Hammonds said.

Walker Knight, who retired as director of the department of editorial services in 1983, said Rutledge was "soft-spoken but had a backbone of steel."

"All the staff admired him," Knight said.

Concerns about the efficiency of Southern Baptists' home-missions enterprise came under scrutiny several times during the 20th century. The most recent was 1959, when a study committee recommended the HMB should continue as a separate agency of the SBC but restructured its work around cooperative agreements with Baptist state conventions.

The work of NAMB is likely to be placed under the microscope once more in discussions of a Great Commission Task Force appointed by SBC president Johnny Hunt in June.

The current chairman of NAMB's board of trustees, Florida pastor Tim Patterson, has already suggested it might be more efficient to merge NAMB and the International Mission Board into a single missionary-sending entity.

 

Norman Jameson is editor of the Biblical Recorder. This story is adapted from two separate articles that appear on the Biblical Recorder website.

Also see:

Hammond's resignation another marker in NAMB leadership turmoil

Lewis: Restructure a mistake




Samford cancels event featuring Rick Pitino

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (ABP) — Samford University has canceled an upcoming event featuring Rick Pitino, the University of Louisville basketball coach in the news for a scandal involving adultery and abortion.

Philip Poole, executive director of university communication at the Baptist-affiliated school in Birmingham, Ala., said the dean of Samford's Cumberland School of Law spoke to Pitino Aug. 12. The two "mutually agreed" it would be best for all concerned to cancel a leadership luncheon featuring the championship-winning coach that had been scheduled for Sept. 10.

According to media reports, Pitino, a practicing Roman Catholic, admitted to police that he had consensual sex six years ago with a woman now charged with trying to extort him and paid for her to have an abortion.

Karen Sypher, whom Pitino says he met while drinking in a Louisville bar on Aug. 1, 2003, was indicted in May on federal charges of extortion and making false statements to the FBI.

Sypher entered a plea of not guilty. She claims that Pitino raped her and gave her $3,000 to have an abortion. Police have said they doubt her credibility. Prosecutors accuse her of demanding cars, a house and $10 million from Pitino to keep  quiet about the tryst.

Pitino admits to having an encounter with Sypher, but his lawyer claimed the coach thought the money he gave her was for health insurance and not an abortion.

Pitino apologized Aug. 12 for an "indiscretion six years ago" and said he has no plans to resign as Louisville's men's basketball coach. University officials have, so far, backed him.

Poole said the Pitino luncheon at Samford, arranged by some Cumberland alumni and co-sponsored by the university's business school, had not been widely publicized beyond a save-the-date e-mail sent to invitees. It became news after an e-mail announcing it had been canceled from John Carroll, dean of the law school, was leaked to the press.

Pitino, 57, is in his eighth year as Louisville's head basketball coach. He has a career record of 521 wins and 191 losses and won a national title while at the University of Kentucky in 1996.

While it does not appear the scandal will cost Pitino his job, it has sullied the reputation of the married father of five. He has raised millions of dollars for charity through the Daniel Pitino Foundation, named in honor of an infant son who died in 1987 at the age of 6 months from congenital heart failure.

 

–Bob Allen is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press.




NAMB trustees name acting interim president

Longtime NAMB staff member Richard Harris was named acting interim president Aug. 12.

ALPHARETTA, Ga. (ABP) — North American Mission Board trustees on Aug. 12 named Richard Harris, the organization's senior strategist for missions advancement, as acting interim president after the group's second president resigned — much as his predecessor did.

Harris, a long-time staff member of the Southern Baptist Convention agency formed in a major denominational restructuring in 1997, takes over for Geoff Hammond. Hammond resigned Aug. 11 after a seven-hour board of trustee meeting, held in executive session at the agency's suburban Atlanta headquarters.

Board chairman Tim Patterson, pastor of Hillcrest Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Fla., said even though there has been much public speculation about the reasons for the called trustee meeting in recent days, they involved personnel matters and would remain confidential.

Two weeks earlier a trustee leaked an e-mail reporting concerns among the board's officers about Hammond's leadership.

Ttrustees hoped hiring Hammond, a former missionary, in May 2007 would move the agency forward after his predecessor, Bob Reccord, resigned amid allegations of mismanagement the year before.

Critics said Hammond lacked the management skills to effectively run an organization as large as NAMB, which oversees more than 5,600 missionaries in the United States and Canada.

The Tennessean newspaper in Nashville recently quoted one trustee concerned about Hammond's leadership, particularly that he reportedly hired friends instead of qualified persons for key positions. Three of Hammond's closest associates resigned with him. Another trustee told the newspaper that board members tried to help Hammond adjust to his new role, but that it wasn't working.

Critics say Geoff Hammond, who resigned as NAMB president Aug. 11, lacked the leadership skills for an agency so large.

The e-mail circulated prior to the trustee meeting described staff morale at NAMB as being at an all-time low.

One staff member who spoke to Associated Baptist Press on condition of anonymity said he didn't sense low morale in his department and most of the people he talked to Aug. 12 were surprised and saddened but confident in trustee leadership and optimistic about the future of NAMB.

Another staffer said he believed there was a morale problem, and most people he knows would probably feel relieved that tensions affecting their work were being addressed. He said he knew of some people who would have taken other jobs were it not for the poor economy, in which they had to worry about being unable to sell homes in the Atlanta area after they moved.

Hammond did not respond to an e-mail request for comment.

–Bob Allen is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press. 

Previous stories:

NAMB president, 3 associates stepping down

NAMB trustees consider removing agency head




NAMB president, 3 associates stepping down

ALPHARETTA, Ga. (ABP) — The head of the Southern Baptist Convention North American Mission Board and three top associates resigned during a called meeting of the agency's board of trustees Aug. 11.

Trustees convened the special meeting after board leaders identified "serious issues" about leadership of Geoff Hammond, president of the agency since March 2007.

Geoff Hammond

Board Chairman Tim Patterson, pastor of Hillcrest Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Fla., said details of a seven-hour meeting held in executive session would remain confidential.

Earlier reports said trustee leaders were upset by Hammond's unwillingness to work under constraints imposed after his predecessor stepped down amid allegations of mismanagement and chronic morale problems at the agency based in Alpharetta, Ga.

Patterson said in a statement that three of Hammond's closest associates also would resign. They are Dennis Culbreth, senior assistant to the president; Steve Reid, senior associate to the president for strategy development; and Brandon Pickett, leader of the communications team.

Patterson said Hammond's resignation takes effect immediately.

In May NAMB trustees unanimously approved a resolution affirming Hammond for "exemplary, unique leadership and vision."

 

 




SERMON: Poverty and the Baptist Legacy in the World

There is a scene in the book of Nehemiah where Nehemiah has inspected the conditions of Jerusalem and has called the people together. He informs them of the situation as he sees it and then calls them to action saying, “You see the bad situation we are in … let us rebuild the wall of Jerusalem so that we will no longer be a reproach.” And the people responded saying, “Let us arise and build.” The Scripture then says, “So they put their hands (together) to working for the common good.” (Nehemiah 2:17-18, NRSV) Baptists have always been those who somehow (in spite of their differences) have been able to “put their hands together to working for the common good.”

Ellis Orozco

My paternal grandfather came to the United States from Monterrey in 1909 to save his family from the starvation precipitated by the Mexican revolutionary war. When I was a child my grandfather lived with us. He didn’t speak much English. He would speak in Spanish. I would answer in English, and we understood each other perfectly. As a child the thing I loved most about my grandfather was that he always had candy and money … and he would give it to me. He would see me and say, “Venga aqui” (Come here). I would go sit on his lap. He would hold me tight and whisper in my ear … “Nunca olvides” (never forget). And I would say, “Whatever, Grandpa … you got any money?” He would place a few silver coins in my little hand and would say, “Nunca olvides.” And I would say, “Yeah … sure grandpa.” I didn’t understand … but now I do. Never forget means never forget who you are … never forget where you come from … never forget your heritage. I get it grandpa. I didn’t always get it. There was a time (during me teenage years) when I didn’t want to remember. I didn’t want to be Mexican, because I didn’t want to be different. But I get it now, Grandpa … and you were right. I pray that Texas Baptists would hear my Grandpa’s words … “Nunca Olivides.” Baptists have always been those who, somehow, (in spite of their differences) have been able to “put their hands together to working for the common good.”

I want us to reflect tonight on why, historically, that has been so, and why that innate Baptist ability to organize and work together for the common good has shaped us into a force that is uniquely prepared for the challenges of the 21st century. Specifically, the challenges we will face as change agents in a world that will grow increasingly hostile toward Christianity and increasingly apathetic toward the poor.

The most pressing issue for all of us is globalization. We must preserve a distinctively Baptist witness in the world because the world has changed and continues to change dramatically. Change has always been a part of life. That is nothing new. What is unprecedented in human history is the rate of change. The acceleration of change is killing us. Corporations are falling like monolithic giants. Nations are going bankrupt. The world is shrinking at an exponential rate and collaborative efforts are expanding at the speed of a microchip.

The world will not be the same ten years from now, and the church is not immune. Churches are trying to live with four and five distinct and very different generations worshipping under the same roof. And while we fight our worship wars, ecclesiological battles, and creedal clashes, and doctrinal differences … there are millions suffering under the oppressive forces of poverty. It is a mind-blowing and dizzying time to be alive … and most Christian groups will begin to shrink away and build fortresses of protection against every perceived danger or threat … but, I believe that we, as Baptists, have been shaped as a people for such a time as this. We have in our arsenal of faith practices the tools we need to ride the waves of change.

Those pieces of our Baptist legacy that we have all studied and cherished as formative values in the practice of our faith … things like soul competency, the priesthood of every believer, religious freedom (and its soul mate – the separation of church and state), voluntary cooperation based on missionary zeal, church autonomy (and one of its essential benefactors, non-creedalism). These stand like great communication links towering over the landscape of Baptist life. They connect us and benefit us even before we’re able to name them.

Our Baptist heritage – the Baptist distinctives – make us a powerfully effective Christian force in a rapidly changing world. Please understand, any one of our Baptist distinctives is held by a number of different Christian groups, but none can claim the unique combination of beliefs we hold.

As Bill Pinson puts it … It is “the combination of beliefs and practices (that) sets Baptists apart from other Christian groups. There is a distinctive group of doctrines and polities for Baptists, a sort of Baptist recipe. Like most recipes, each of the ingredients is not unique to Baptists, but the total mix is distinctively Baptist” (BaptistDistinctives.com web site). I agree with Dr. Pinson, and I would add, it is that recipe that makes us strategically positioned for the race to globalization, and therefore, strategically positioned to be Jesus Christ to the world’s poor.

Our conservative Biblicism combined with our love for religious freedom … our penchant for autonomous thought and practice combined with our passion for cooperation … our disdain for hierarchal governance combined with our respect for accountability through congregational leadership … our theological center of grace and grace alone, combined with our innate suspicion of anything that smacks of legalism or creedalism … all combine to make us especially adept for the challenges of the next century.

As an example allow me to refer to just two aspects of globalization as discussed by Thomas Friedman. The first from his book, The Lexus and the Olive Tree, and the second from his more recent work, The World is Flat.

In The Lexus and the Olive Tree, Friedman describes the characteristics of the countries and institutions that will collapse under the weight of globalization and compares them to those that will prosper. In his characterization he notes that the nations that are inflexible, totalitarian, and dictatorial will suffer and languish behind a changing world. By the same token, institutions that are controlling, legalistic, and demand conformity at all costs will wither under globalization. Such nations and institutions will NOT carry us into the future. (p. 212-247)

Nowhere is this more important to understand than in our own nation. Jim Wallis reminds us that “Spiritual and religious values should influence our perception of and participation in politics – making a difference in the systems that govern and either hurt or help people. But while religion belongs in the political world, religion and ideology are not good partners.” (The Soul of Politics, p.34)

Yale law professor Stephen Carter, in his book, The Culture of Disbelief, warns against “reaching conclusions on political grounds and, afterward, finding religious justification for them, instead of letting genuine religious conviction shape honest political judgments” (The Soul of Politics, p. 34). And Jim Wallis concludes that “perhaps the best test of the spiritual integrity of our political commitments is their predictability or unpredictability” (The Soul of Politics, p. 34). It seems to me that most of what is coming out of the larger Christian community in America is extremely predictable.

The problem is that no one is talking to each other. If the last three elections have taught us anything they have taught us that the polarization of America is complete. And American religion is just as polarized … a polarized American church that is the mirror image of the polarized culture.

Jim Wallis, in The Soul of Politics, concludes that “the inability of either liberalism or conservatism to lead us forward is increasingly clear.” (p. 21) He says that “the two dominant forms of religion in our time have failed to provide the spiritual guidance that might inform a politics of moral conscience. Both conservative and liberal religion have become culturally captive forces that merely cheer on the ideological camps with which each has identified” (p. 36) Wallis warns, “Religion as a political cheerleader is invariably false religion” (p. 36).

The religious right, for instance, feeling pushed to the margins, “woke up” in the 1970’s and 80’s and decided to become a prophetic force in American politics, and I applaud that thought. If it’s really the thought that counts they are to be highly commended. I am just left wondering where this “great moral force” was in the civil rights battles of the 1950’s and 60’s. Most white Southern Baptist churches were eerily silent during those years when our nation desperately needed a moral compass, and a prophetic voice. Or even worse, they were very vocal on the side of evil. And, more recently, I have to wonder if they did not have a severe case of laryngitis when our country entered into an unprovoked war, against the better judgment of most of the rest of the world.

This is hard for me. I love my country. I’m an avid Olympics fan and I tear up every time I hear the national anthem. I feel the pain of every American athlete who didn’t have a good day. AND I feel the pain of being pushed away from the national conversation because of my Judeo-Christian perspective. Carter, in The Culture of Disbelief, “contends that a prejudice against the influence of religious commitment upon political issues now characterizes many sectors of American society, including the media, academia, the law, and the corridors of political power.” He notes that “religious conviction is trivialized and becomes quickly suspect when it seems to be affecting political matters” (The Soul of Politics, p. 32).

In plain English … the Christian Church in America is being pushed to the margins. And as an ethnic minority in America I say to the church … “Welcome to the margins!! We’ve been waiting for you!!” I agree with most of the values of the religious right. Where I think they get it wrong is that they see being pushed to the margins as a bad thing – something to fight against. I see it as a good thing. In fact, it may be the very thing that saves American Christianity.

The church cannot serve a socio-political ideology and Christ at the same time. The church can speak prophetically only from the margins of society … only from outside the corridors of power … never from the center. Both the left and the right seem to be fighting for a place at the center of political power. And any Christianity operating from that position will be a controlling, legalistic, and spiritually oppressive force, unable to distinguish the voices of political allies from God’s voice. And, I would add, that is the very kind of institution that will wither under the weight of globalization. It is, therefore, imperative that we remain distinctively Baptist because we have the right recipe to be a prophetic voice, speaking from the margins, in a shrinking and dynamically changing world.

The other aspect to globalization I want to briefly mention is what Friedman calls “Open-Sourcing.” In his book, The World is Flat, Friedman discusses the ten forces that flattened the world. Flattener #4 is “Open-Sourcing,” or what Friedman calls, “Self-Organizing collaborative Communities.” It is basically, “thousands of people around the world coming together online to collaborate in writing everything from their own software to their own operating systems to their own dictionary to their own recipe for cola – building always from the bottom up rather than accepting formats or content imposed by corporate hierarchies from the top down” (p. 81) Everyone in the group is allowed to add their improvements to the product … and, oh yeah … they offer the product for free … talk about grace! It’s like the cooperative program on steroids. It’s beyond that. It’s the walls coming down … all of them … and it’s messy. If you don’t like messy then you’re going to have a very difficult time in the 21st century.

The larger Christian witness in America doesn’t like messy. They like clean lines; black and white; a place for everything and everything in its place; doctrinal purity (as if that were really possible). The problem with those who seek to purify the church has always been that they wind up looking more like those who crucified Jesus than those who followed him.

It seems to me that in a day when all the walls that have separated nations and people groups are coming down making room for larger and more effective cooperation, the larger Baptist witness in America is pulling out of collaborative efforts and building more doctrinal walls than ever before. It is one the most frustrating problems in Baptist life today. It is absolutely essential that we hold close and dear the precious ingredients of our Baptist recipe which allow us to ride the wave of collaborative communities. If we don’t … I’m not sure who else will, AND if we don’t the ones who suffer the consequences of our failure are the poor.

Remember, we do it for the sake of the poor, the hurting, and the lost. We must preserve a distinctively Baptist witness in the world because the poor, the hurting, and the lost are depending on it. Gandhi said, “Poverty is the worst form of violence” (Seeds of Peace, p. 127) I pastored for ten years in the poorest county in Texas and one of the poorest in the nation. The poverty in our state and world is simply overwhelming. The poor are depending on our witness in the face of the strongholds of systemic evil in our state and nation. What Walter Wink calls “the domination system,” or “the powers that be” (The Powers that Be, p. 32).

The larger Baptist witness in America seems to have fixated on a few politically salient issues, and although those issues are not unimportant, in fixating on them we have largely abdicated our prophetic voice where it counts the most. We have failed to throw the full weight of our Baptist strength behind the life and death issues that affect the most people. I speak here of the multiplicity and complexity of issues surrounding the plight of the poor.

Tony Campolo points out that the Christian Coalition, the most successful religious lobbying group in American history, was formed to address the need for the government to support “traditional family values,” as it defined them … and yet, the voter guides which the Christian Coalition distributed to millions of Christians, completely ignored the needs of the poor (Speaking My Mind, p. 126).

I don’t have to remind this audience of Jesus’ concern for the poor. It was all-consuming for him. In the Old Testament, the subject of the poor is the second most prominent theme. Idolatry is the first, and the two are often connected. In the New Testament, one out of every sixteen verses is about the poor. In the Gospels, the number is one out of every ten verses; in Luke’s Gospel one of every seven, and in the book of James one of every five.

All the politically charged issues of Jesus’ day were (it seems to me) side-stepped by him in lieu of his concern for the poor. In his inaugural homecoming message at Nazareth Jesus sets the agenda for his ministry when he says, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor” (Luke 4:18a, NIV).

Jesus starts his most famous sermon by saying, “Blessed are the poor … ” (Luke 6:20). And if Hans Dieter Betz is right in identifying the literary genre of the Sermon on the Mount as the Greek “epitomai” (The Sermon on the Mount from the Hermeneia series) – and I believe he is – then the epitome of Jesus’ teaching (as compiled by Matthew) is his concern for the poor and the marginalized and the oppressed … the 90% of the population (in his day) who, because of the Roman and Temple taxation systems could not afford to both tithe and live, and were, therefore, labeled the “unrighteous ones” (the “Am Harez” of the land) … the working poor.

According to Richard A. Horsley, around the first century there arose, for the first time in Hebrew history, a minority class of people who lived in the cities (mainly Sepphoris and Tiberias) and produced nothing, living instead off of the taxation system. These citizens of the “consumer city” were an elite class living off of the working poor (Archaeology, History and Society in Galilee, p.79). The working poor (labeled the “Am Harez” or the “unrighteous ones”) were the ones who loved Jesus the most … because he first loved them. His heart was always with them. In fact, there is no written record that Jesus every entered the cities of Sepphoris or Tiberias, the two largest and most important first century cities in Galilee. He spent all of his time, it seems, in the small villages … with the poor.

If we lose our distinctively Baptist heritage, there will not be a unified, coherent Baptist voice speaking for the “Am Harez” of our state and our nation … and a greatly diminished one speaking for the “Am Harez” of the world. Both the left and the right in America Christianity have sold out to one political perspective for thirty pieces of silver (promises that never come true, and trickle-downs that never trickle). Their political litmus tests ignore the largest, and in global terms, the most devastating issues of our times: all of the issues fueled by abject poverty. Their alliances (or more often, their failure to align with certain groups) betrays their deeper concern with preserving the American Way of life and the truth as America sees it, than standing with the one who said, “I am the Way, and the Truth and the Life” (John 4:6, NIV).

Richard Lischer in his Lyman-Beecher lectures at Yale said, “Contemporary religion focuses on its own successes and avoids at all costs the paradox of the cross, a move that has produced a flood of compensatory words” (The End of Words, p. 9).

The larger Baptist witness in America is in grave danger of a great “Christological distance.” What Erhardt Guttgemann calls “the distance created by the tendency to redefine Christ in some more “contemporary” meaning, less dependent on just who the crucified Jesus was” (The Politics of Jesus, p. 120). You know who Jesus was … he was poor; he was born poor; he lived poor and with the poor; he died poor; and he rose again for the poor.

John Howard Yoder, in his The Politics of Jesus reminds us that “to follow after Christ is not simply to learn from him, but also to share his destiny” (p. 124). “Wherever He leads I’ll go. He drew me closer to His side, I sought His will to know, And in that will I now abide, Wherever He leads I'll go. I'll follow my Christ who loves me so, Wherever He leads I'll go” (The Baptist Hymnal, #285). Really? Wherever he leads? He leads us to the doorsteps of the poorest of the poor. He points to them and then turns to us and says, “Whatever you have done for the least of these, you have done for me.” (Matthew 25:40, NIV)

To follow Christ wherever he takes me … WHEREVER He takes me … without being labeled a socialist or a communist or a liberal or, even worse, dare I say … a Democrat. I don’t believe that I’m any of those labels. And, at one time or another, I have probably been all of them … and will be again. But the words of Paul keep ringing in my ears, “I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of sharing in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, to attain to the resurrection from the dead” (Philippians 3:10-11, NIV). I want to know Christ! And, so I follow NO MAN, NO SOCIO-POLITICAL IDEOLOGY, NO DENOMINATIONAL APARATUS, NO CAREER PATH – I WANT TO KNOW JESUS – I WANT TO FOLLOW JESUS – WHEREVER HE LEADS I’LL GO – AND JESUS ALWAYS LEADS US TO THE POOR!

My mother is at the age where she is starting to give her children (my sister, my two brothers, and I) pictures from her treasured collection of family albums … some of her most treasured memories preserved by Kodak. I told her there is only one picture I want. It is my father’s first grade class picture (from 1939). If you look you’ll find him on the third row, three kids over from the right. The reason I want that picture is that there is a hole in it … a hole where my father’s feet should be. Apparently, he was one of only two children in the class who was too poor to own a pair of shoes. There are about forty kids in the picture. They took the picture and my father didn’t have shoes. At the age of seven he somehow understood that there was something wrong about that, and, therefore, something wrong with him. So he brought the picture home and before anyone could see it, he cut his own feet out of the picture. I can see my father as a little seven year old boy so filled with shame that he takes out his pocketknife and carefully cuts out his own feet.

I want that picture because it defines my father’s life: Work hard, work hard, work hard, to make as much money as you can so that none of your children will ever have to cut their feet out of the picture.

We must preserve our distinctive witness because no child should ever have to cut their own feet out of the picture.

In the spirit of Nehemiah … I say to you … “You see the bad situation we are in … let us rebuild our Baptist heritage and identity … so that we will no longer be a reproach.” And may we as a people respond saying, “Let us arise and build.” And may the generations that follow say of us … “So they put their hands (together) to working for the common good.” (Nehemiah 2:17-18, NRSV)

 

Ellis Orozco is pastor of First Baptist Church in Richardson, Texas. He delivered this sermon at the New Baptist Covenant’s Midwest regional meeting in Norman, Okla., Aug. 6.

 




Randall renews call for Baptist Convention of the Americas

NORMAN, Okla.—Baptists must relinquish the status quo in order to unleash God’s power, participants at the New Baptist Covenant’s Midwest regional gathering were warned.

That may mean revising a concept proposed about a decade ago—creation of a Baptist Convention of the Americas, said Mitch Randall, pastor of NorthHaven Church in Norman, Okla. The congregation is affiliated with the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and the Baptist General Convention of Texas.

“The time to think bigger than the status quo is upon us,” Randall said. “Look in the mirror. For too long, we have been caught in a territorial struggle. That’s not an indictment but acknowledgment of reality. We are fragmented.

Mitch Randall, pastor of NorthHaven Church in Norman, Okla., challenged participants to “dream bigger.”

“Many conventions, institutions and churches are worried sick about their sustainability. … If something doesn’t happen soon, everything we’ve worked for will pass away.”

Mainstream Baptists must “dream bigger” and embrace a vision for sending men and women to be the presence of Christ in the world, Randall said.

A four-part strategy will be required to fulfill that vision, he said. The strategy includes:

The local church must become a priority again.

“The local church has lost is place of prominence in the strategy to engage in the Great Commission,” he said. “The time has come for the local church to reclaim her role as a leader in the Baptist movement.”

Local congregations can play crucial roles in theological training and sending missionaries, he noted.

A “missional theology” must touch everything Baptists do.

“The mission of Christ must be pre-eminent among all else,” Randall said. “We must walk and talk like the presence of Christ.”

Missions is especially germane for the young generation, he suggested. “They want to extend the grace of God and embrace a cause greater than their own. If we don’t understand this premise, we will lose the next generation.”

Baptists must support the social justice movement.

“We must address ethical issues from a faith perspective,” he urged.

“The next generation has an incredible opportunity to right many of the wrongs we have committed,” he said, citing challenges affiliated with the environment, materialism and poverty.

“We are in the perfect position to reach out to this generation, but we must be authentic. Our deeds must match our words.”

The next generation must be empowered.

Randall affirmed the work of seminaries, but he also observed many seminary graduates do not want to work in local churches. “If we’re honest, who can blame them?” he asked. “Churches have not always been welcoming to young ministers, especially young female ministers.”

But churches must engage young ministers and young adults in starting churches, he stressed.

“Churches need to start churches,” he said. “Tap the talent of young Christians. Take a chance and see how God blesses their efforts.”

Baptists also need to collaborate in new ways, Randall said, remembering how the late Herbert Reynolds called for a new Baptist Convention of the Americas about 10 years ago. Such a convention would span so-called moderate Baptist work across typical denominational boundaries and bring them together for common ministry and purpose.

“The time for the Baptist Convention of the Americas is now,” he said. “If something like this is ever to occur, the Baptist General Convention of Texas is going to have to take the lead. Texas Baptists like to talk big; it’s time for Texas Baptists to lead out big.”




Heath care system broken; Christians should help fix it, speakers say

NORMAN, Okla.—Since the church has abdicated its responsibility for providing health care in America, Christians should help and not hinder the government as it seeks solutions to the nation’s medical crisis, a physician with experience in public health told participants at the New Baptist Covenant meeting in Oklahoma.

“We’re talking about a system that is not working,” Michael Pontious said during a seminar on health care and the local church.

Participants in a breakout session during the New Baptist Covenant meeting in Oklahoma.

ous, a member of Crossroad Church in Enid, Okla., is director of family practice residency for the University of Oklahoma/Garfield Country Medical Society Rural Program and is editor of the Journal of the Oklahoma State Medical Association. He stressed his opinions are his own and not those of the university, the medical association or his church.

Earlier in the seminar, a participant said the U.S. health care system should be called a “sick care non-system.”

Pontious affirmed that assessment, adding, “I’m so sick and tired of trying to figure out how to help people get taken care of.”

He illustrated with two recent experiences.

First, a woman who was 20 weeks pregnant with a kidney infection took a prescription order to a pharmacy on a Friday. She does not speak English well and could not advocate for herself when the pharmacist said her insurance wouldn’t cover the cost of the medicine—a misunderstanding and overstatement of the facts.

On Monday, she had to be admitted to the hospital “in a life-and-death situation,” simply because she could not get her $4 prescription filled. So, she could have died, and the medical costs soared.

When Pontious called the insurance company to complain, the person on the end of the line responded, “Dr. Pontious, that’s the rules.”

Second, a woman was having excessive menstruation, losing a significant amount of blood and needed surgery after medications had failed to help. But she could not afford hospitalization.

 When Pontious asked her doctor to help her get in the hospital, she replied, “I’d love to do this, but I work for a corporation.”

“We’ve got a system that’s broken,” Pontious said.

Historically, churches and Christian organizations provided much of the infrastructure for American health care, he noted. But more recently, “we have abdicated our responsibility for a good part of the care in this country” to the government.

“Because we have abdicated, it’s our responsibility to hold our government accountable for trying to fix this problem,” he added. “When government comes up with a plan, it’s immoral, it’s two-faced to oppose doing the right thing.”

Americans—led by Christians—need to affirm the right to affordable health care, Pontious stressed.

“We need a system in this country that allows access to health care, no matter what your station in life is,” he said. “We need a system that allows choice … and that cannot allow a cotton-pickin’ insurance company to deny access to reasonable care.”

Opponents of health care reform are manipulating people with fear, Pontious charged. “There are lots of mistruths out there, and where do they go?” he said. “To your fear. They manipulate you with your fear.”

But America should have the capacity to improve its health care system without realizing those fears, he insisted.

“A publicly available option is the only way to keep the insurance companies honest,” he said. “Americans don’t have the stomach for a Canadian or an English system (of socialized medicine). Individually, we don’t want restrictions. But a public system is the only way to keep the business side of insurance honest. … Every other modern society has figured this out.”




Poor and marginalized need Baptists to speak prophetically, Orozco says

NORMAN, Okla.—The plight of poor people depends significantly upon Baptists’ determination to retain their unique legacy, an urban pastor who spent a decade ministering in one of the nation’s poorest counties told participants at the New Baptist Covenant regional meeting in Oklahoma.

“We must preserve a distinctively Baptist witness in the world, because the poor, the hurting and the lost are depending upon it,” insisted Ellis Orozco, pastor of First Baptist Church in Richardson and former pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in McAllen, in Texas’ impoverished Lower Rio Grande Valley.

“The poor are depending upon our witness in the face of the strongholds of systemic evil in our … nation,” Orozco said.

Ellis Orozco, pastor of First Baptist Church in Richardson.

But Baptists must maintain their advocacy and help for the poor “in a world that will grow increasingly hostile toward Christianity and increasingly apathetic toward the poor,” he added.

The plight of the poor is spiraling in large part because of globalization, he explained. The world’s economy is interconnected, change is accelerating, corporations and nations are going bankrupt—and the poor are stuck at the bottom of all the upheaval.

“It’s a mind-blowing and dizzying time to be alive, and most Christian groups will begin to shrink away and build fortresses of protection against every perceived danger or threat,” he said. “But I believe that we, as Baptists, have been shaped as a people for such a time as this. We have in our arsenal of faith practices the tools we need to ride the waves of change.”

Those “tools” reflect Baptists’ unique combination of historic values and beliefs, he said. They include soul competency, the priesthood of every believer, religious freedom and the separation of church and state, voluntary cooperation based upon missionary zeal and church autonomy.

The way these qualities interact “make us especially adept for the challenges of the next century,” Orozco said.

He cited political columnist and author Thomas Friedman, who predicts nations and institutions will not survive the escalating demands of globalism if they are rigid, autocratic and controlling. But Baptists’ heritage gives them the flexibility and openness to thrive amid globalism, Orozco said.

Unfortunately, Friedman’s description of rigidity and autocracy describes much of religion in America, Orozco observed, pointing to increasing polarization in American politics and religion. Consequently, both the religious right and the religious left—conservative and liberal—have become captive to the culture and unable to offer leadership.

“The Christian church in America is being pushed to the margins,” but that’s not bad, he said. “As an ethnic minority in America, I say to the church, ‘Welcome to the margins.’ … It may be the very thing that saves American Christianity.”

That’s because operating from the margins could overcome the conflict of interest generated by religion’s desire to work from a power base at the center of society, he said.

“The church cannot serve a socio-political ideology and Christ at the same time,” he stressed. “The church can speak prophetically only from the margins of society—only from outside the corridors of power, never from the center.

“Any Christianity operating from that position will be a controlling, legalistic and spiritually oppressive force, unable to distinguish the voices of political allies from God’s voice.  And, I would add, that is the very kind of institution that will wither under the weight of globalization.  It is imperative that we remain distinctively Baptist because we have the right recipe to be a prophetic voice, speaking from the margins, in a shrinking and dynamically changing world.”

Baptists’ spiritual heritage also enables them to collaborate well with others to accomplish vital objectives, Orozco said, referencing what Friedman calls “open-sourcing.”

“It’s messy,” he conceded, noting, “The larger Christian witness in America doesn’t like messy.” But that runs counter to important trends that track effectiveness the world over, he added.

Unfortunately, “the larger Baptist witness in America is pulling out of collaborative efforts and building more doctrinal walls than ever before,” he said. “It is one the most frustrating problems in Baptist life today.  It is absolutely essential that we ride the wave of collaborative communities.  If we don’t … I’m not sure who else will. And if we don’t, the ones who suffer the consequences of our failure are the poor.”

Because many Baptists in America have “fixated on a few politically salient issues,” and even though those issues are important, “we have largely abdicated our prophetic voice where it counts the most,” he charged. “We have failed to throw the full weight of our Baptist strength behind the life-and-death issues that affect the most people—the multiplicity and complexity of issues surrounding the plight of the poor.”

In contrast, Jesus side-stepped political issues in order to care for the poor, Orozco said. “Jesus began his most famous sermon by saying, ‘Blessed are the poor,” he explained. “His heart was always with them. … He spent all his time, it seems, in the small villages with the poor.”

So, much is at stake if Baptists fail to identify with what the New Testament calls the “Am Harez”—the working poor, he added.

“If we lose our distinctively Baptist heritage, there will not be a unified, coherent Baptist voice speaking for the Am Harez of our state and our nation … and a greatly diminished one speaking for the Am Harez of the world,” he warned.

“Both the left and the right in America Christianity have sold out to one political perspective for 30 pieces of silver—promises that never come true, and trickle-downs that never trickle.  Their political litmus tests ignore the largest, and in global terms, the most devastating issues of our times—all of the issues fueled by abject poverty.  Their alliances … betray their deeper concern with preserving the American way of life and the truth as America sees it than standing with the one who said, ‘I am the Way, and the Truth and the Life.’”

Baptists often sing the old hymn “Wherever He Leads, I’ll Go,” but Orozco said there’s only one way to prove they mean it: “Jesus always leads us to the poor.”

The full text of Orozco’s sermon is available here.




“Agape” requires respect for women in ministry, Burleson insists

NORMAN, Okla.—A Southern Baptist pastor from Oklahoma compared his fellow conservatives’ treatment of women in ministry to earlier generations’ treatment of African-Americans.

“History will one day look back on how we Baptists in the 21st century treated our women who were called by God to minister. It is my prayer that conservative, Bible-believing men will not make the same mistake our Southern Baptist forefathers made when they remained quiet two centuries ago as another minority experienced abuse,” Wade Burleson told the Midwest regional gathering of the New Baptist Covenant.

Burleson, pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church in Enid, Okla., framed his message to the closing session of the multiethnic meeting as a personal confession and a public challenge.

Oklahoma Pastor Wade Burleson said the barometer of agape love is how we treat one another.

“I now believe in my heart that Jesus is more concerned with how we Baptists treat each other than he is what we Baptists teach each other. The people loved by Christ—particularly those who differ with me—are to be far more precious to me than any finer point of theology believed by me,” he said.

Burleson noted a recent address by California Baptist pastor Rick Warren to the Islamic Society of North America where Warren challenged Muslims and Christians to respect the dignity of every person by valuing, not just tolerating, people; restore civility to civilization; and protect freedom of speech and freedom of religion for all people.

Before Baptist Christians can begin to respond to Muslims in that way, Burleson said, they need to learn to treat their own Baptist brothers—and especially sisters—with that kind of respect.

“In other words, until I can treat all my Baptist friends with dignity, value them as people and respect their views—particularly and especially those Baptists who disagree with me—it will be impossible for me to treat Muslims in the same manner,” he said.

“Likewise, until my liberal or moderate Baptist friends experience Christ’s love in their hearts for me, a theologically conservative Baptist, and until they value my personhood, respect my views and work with me toward a greater common good, it will be impossible for them to do the same for Muslims.

“The greatest barometer for how well we Baptists understand the importance of agape love—which the Scriptures call the distinguishing mark of followers of Jesus Christ—is our treatment of each other.”

In particular, Baptists who are serious about obeying Christ’s command to love one another must rise to defend women in ministry when other Baptists mistreat them, he emphasized.

“These women profess a call from God, show real evidence of being set apart by Christ and have experienced the empowerment of the Holy Spirit to proclaim Jesus Christ and him crucified to the world, yet many of them are being subjected to abuse—and that by Baptists,” Burleson said.

“When our Baptist women in ministry experience such personal mistreatment, ridicule or harm, we are commanded by Christ our Lord to bind up their wounds. And sometimes we must even take the weapon of abuse out of the hands of the perpetrators of those wounds.”

He pointed to specific instances of what he considered harsh and unjust treatment of women in ministry—Sheri Klouda being dismissed as a professor at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary; Julie Pennington-Russell facing protestors when she accepted the pastorate of Calvary Baptist Church in Waco; and a female seminary student whose preaching professor allowed all male students to leave the classroom when she spoke so they would not be subjected to hearing a woman deliver a message from the Bible.

Burleson, a past president of the Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma, particularly noted a turning point in his attitude toward the treatment of women. The incident occurred when he was moderating a state convention business session and a woman was elected second vice president.

“I will never forget the sight from the platform as several men throughout the auditorium stood and literally turned their backs to the platform as they voted against the first woman to be elected to general office within the Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma,” he recalled.

“That moment was an awakening for me. I realized that any cherished principle that would ever cause a Christian to be uncivil, unkind or unloving toward a sister in Christ is a principle that should be thrown out for the sake of obedience to the command of Christ to love one another.”

Not all Baptists will agree on the interpretation of Scriptures regarding the role of women in church leadership, but there is “no wiggle room” when it comes to Christ’s command to love, he said.

“You may not like the fact that women are now being called by God to preach, or called by God to do missions, or called by God to teach. You may ever consider it a violation of your principles for a woman to teach a man, or preach Christ to a man, or baptize a man, or lead a man, but there is one thing you and I cannot—we must not—forget,” Burleson said.

“You and I are called to love each other and every sister in Christ who feels called to ministry. We are called to affirm the dignity of every Christian woman called to minister. We are commanded to treat them with respect and civility.

“We are also called to love, respect and affirm the autonomy of local Baptist congregations and denominations that utilize these gifted women in ministry as they see fit. To censor them, reject them, abuse them or condemn their character is a sin of the first order.”