For
SBC, 1984 was the year of the pivot
At mid-point in the battle then raging in the Southern
Baptist Convention, a conservative victory appeared far from certain. But in
retrospect, 1984 looks like the pivotal year which set the convention on a new
course.
By Bob
Allen in Baptist News Global
In 1949 George Orwell published Nineteen
Eighty-Four, a dystopian novel imagining a future totalitarian state where
people are constantly reminded of mass surveillance by the slogan “Big Brother
is watching you.”
Russell DildayThirty years ago,
Russell Dilday, then president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in
Fort Worth, Texas, found parallels in a 5-year-old political battle escalating
within the 14.1 million-member Southern Baptist Convention.
“Incredible as it sounds, there is
emerging in this denomination built on the principle of rugged individualism,
an incipient Orwellian mentality,” Dilday said in the 1984 convention sermon at
the SBC annual meeting in Kansas City. “It threatens to drag us down from the
high ground to the low lands of suspicion, rumor, criticism, innuendoes, guilt
by association and the rest of that demonic family of forced uniformity.”
“I shudder when I see a coterie of
the orthodox watching to catch a brother in a statement that sounds heretical,
carelessly categorizing churches as liberal or fundamentalist, unconcerned
about the adverse effect that criticism may have on God’s work,” Dilday said.
Many viewed Dilday’s call to “higher
ground” of denominational unity as siding with the so-called “moderates”
resisting a movement of conservative Baptists who set out in 1979 to correct
what they viewed as a drift toward liberalism in the nation’s second-largest
faith group behind Roman Catholics.
Hoisting a banner of biblical
“inerrancy” — the idea the Bible is literally true in all areas including
science and history — conservatives mobilized grassroots Southern Baptists to
attend SBC annual meetings for the purpose of voting for presidential
candidates endorsed by what leaders described as a “conservative resurgence.”
The appeal was to return to basics of evangelism and missions in order to save
the SBC from slipping into membership losses like other denominations spiraling
in the so-called “mainline decline.”
The effort succeeded enough that by
1991 battle-weary moderates withdrew from the fray, reinvesting energies in
alternative approaches to missions, theological education and other church
resources through the newly formed Cooperative Baptist Fellowship.
At the midpoint of the SBC
controversy in 1984, such a total victory seemed beyond conservative leaders’
wildest dreams.
Jimmy Draper and John SullivanIn
February 1984, SBC President Jimmy Draper told the SBC Executive Committee that
Southern Baptists had “real division theologically in our convention, but we
can deal with it.”
“I have never called for anybody to
be dismissed or to be fired,” Draper said. “I don’t think that is the way to do
it, but if we pretend we have no differences, we stick our heads in the sand.”
Even with those differences, Draper
said, “there are more things that keep us together than separate us.”
“There is an historic Baptist
principle — which we seem to have forgotten — that says we can respect honest
differences,” Draper said.
Draper left the pastorate in 1991 to
lead the Baptist Sunday School Board, now known as LifeWay Christian Resources.
He retired in 2006.
In March 1984 conservative
resurgence co-founders Paul Pressler and Paige Patterson told a small group of
conservative students at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake
Forest, N.C., they were encouraged by progress toward gaining “equity” for
their views in denominational life.
“Nobody understood how the system
worked,” Pressler, a Houston layman and appeals court judge described the
Southern Baptist Convention prior to 1979 at a symposium sponsored by the
Conservative/Evangelical Fellowship, a group of about 25 students out of a
then-enrollment of 1,200.
“Nobody was sufficiently involved,”
he said. “The convention [machinery] was overwhelming.” There was an enormous
self-perpetuating bureaucracy that was not sensitive to lots of issues.”
Patterson, at the time president of
the Criswell Center for Biblical Studies in Dallas, was asked if he had his way
would all seminary faculty be inerrantists or would others also be allowed to
teach?
“We are 40 million light years away
from that,” Patterson said, but he responded: “If I were personally selecting
the faculty … yes, the whole faculty would be inerrantists.”
“If I were in the position of the
presidency of one of the seminaries — which I think is exceedingly hypothetical
— my first move would be to replace existing faculty members with folks who
have no questions about the full validity of the scriptures.”
Paige PattersonPatterson, 72, was
named president of Southeastern Seminary in 1992. He was elected as SBC
president in both 1998 and 1999 and since 2003 has served as president of
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas.
Battleground in Kansas City
Headlining the 1984 SBC annual
meeting June 12-14 in Kansas City, Mo., Atlanta pastor Charles Stanley garnered
a 52-percent majority on a first ballot, easily outdistancing former Baptist
Sunday School Board President Grady Cothen and John Sullivan, at the time pastor
of Broadmoor Baptist Church in Shreveport, La., and now executive director of
the Florida Baptist Convention.
Stanley was the fourth straight SBC
president elected with support of the conservative faction, following Adrian
Rogers, Bailey Smith and Jimmy Draper. Observers expected a tighter race,
because for the first time moderates had mounted a concerted pre-convention
campaign of their own.
About 2,000 people showed up for a
first-time gathering called the SBC Forum, organized by pastors who believed the
conservative-dominated SBC Pastors Conference had grown too political.
Cecil Sherman, pastor of First
Baptist Church of Asheville. N.C., and one of the conference organizers, said
that for years he had felt out of place at other pre-SBC meetings.
“You can come to the Southern
Baptist Convention and the pre-meeting and never hear from this side of the
house,” said Sherman, “but there is some magnificent thinking going on inside
the minds of some Southern Baptist pastors. They needed a place to speak and now
there’s the platform.”
Cecil ShermanSherman later became
first executive coordinator of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship. He retired
in 1996 and died in 2010 at 82.
Also meeting in Kansas City in 1984
was a much smaller group of about 150 calling itself the Baptist Faith and
Message Fellowship, formed in 1973. One speaker explained the controversy like
this: “The liberals around our convention that liked to be called moderates,
but are really liberals, say we don’t need creeds.”
“They are sort of dumb, because a
creed is just what you believe,” said Malone Cochran, pastor of Mount Zion
Baptist Church in Jonesboro, Ga. “I finally realized they really don’t believe
anything."
Nominated by Jerry Vines — pastor of
First Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Fla., and himself a future SBC president
— Stanley had indicated in late May he was considering allowing his name to be
placed in nomination, but he didn’t make up his mind until the morning of the
election.
Stanley, a committed inerrantist,
told a packed room of reporters he intended to work with all Southern Baptists
and denied he was placed in office by the conservative faction. “I was not
elected by any particular group,” he said. “I can guarantee you that.”
Attention shifted quickly, however,
with passage of a resolution on ordination and the role of women in ministry.
Reacting to gains by a group known today as Baptist Women in Ministry, which
met for the second time in 1984, the resolution affirmed women in “the building
of godly homes” and encouraged their service “in all aspects of church life and
work other than pastoral functions and leadership roles entailing ordination.”
The resolution justified wifely
submission “because the man was first in creation and the woman was first in
the Edenic fall.” Peter Rhea Jones, pastor of First Baptist Church in Decatur,
Ga., said the proclamation was more than just a repudiation of churches which
ordain women as deacons and ministers. “What it did was to denigrate every
women on the planet by putting every woman in an inferior position,” he said.
Backlash included a paid
advertisement denouncing the statement in the Louisville Courier-Journal
coordinated by a Southern Baptist Theological Seminary doctoral student named
Al Mohler. Mohler later changed his mind about women in ministry and today
serves as ninth president of the seminary in Louisville, Ky.
Other business in 1984 included an
unsuccessful attempt by conservatives to defund the Baptist Joint Committee on
Public Affairs. The motion failed by a margin of 52 percent to 48 percent, but
it proved to be a temporary reprieve. Southern Baptists pulled out of the
religious-liberty coalition now known as the Baptist Joint Committee for
Religious Liberty, ceasing all funding in 1991.
Moderates, meanwhile, lost an
attempt to substitute conservative resurgence leader Paul Pressler’s nomination
to the SBC Executive Committee with Bruce McIver, pastor of Wilshire Baptist
Church in Dallas. A show-of-hands vote was close enough to call for a ballot
vote, which Pressler won 5,462-4,607.
Paul PresslerPressler was elected to
the unexpired term of Welton Gaddy, who had to step down after taking a new job
in another state. Today Gaddy is head of the Interfaith Alliance and preaching
pastor at Northminster Church in Monroe, La.
That September the Executive
Committee’s public relations work group investigated Baptist Press’ handling of
a story involving a Southern Seminary student who had served as a driver for
seminary President Roy Honeycutt. The student lodged a complaint against
Pressler for allegedly secretly recording a phone call.
Pressler went on to become an
Executive Committee officer and was involved in the 1990 firing of two Baptist
Press editors which prompted formation of Associated Baptist Press, an
independent news service that last year merged with the Religious Herald
in a new entity recently rebranded as Baptist News Global.
After the storm
Fallout from the conservative
juggernaut was swift. At Southern Seminary, Roy Honeycutt opened the 1984 fall
semester with a convocation message calling on moderates to battle against
“unholy forces, which if left unchecked, will destroy essential qualities of
both our convention and this seminary.”
Honeycutt, who retired as president
in 1993 and died in 2004, subsequently declined a challenge to debate
Paige Patterson, proposing instead a “return to an open convention” urging
Patterson, Pressler “and their co-conspirators to “turn off their computers,
abolish their mailing lists, quit printing their scandal sheet newspapers and
allow Southern Baptists to speak for themselves.”
Russell Dilday wrote in the July
1984 issue of Southwestern News that the real issue dividing Southern
Baptists was not liberal versus conservative theology, but “a fundamentalist
political machine” with a stated goal of “going for the jugular vein,” meaning
control of the convention’s agencies and institutions.
In October Southwestern trustees
tabled a motion instructing Dilday to stay out of politics, an action viewed as
a vote of confidence in his leadership. The faculty added their vote of
confidence in October. Ten years later, however, Dilday was fired by what had
become a majority conservative-leaning board of trustees in a 26-7 vote. He
went on to teach at George W. Truett Theological Seminary and is founding
chancellor of the B.H. Carroll Theological Institute in Arlington, Texas.
Zig Ziglar, a motivational speaker
newly elected as first vice president of the Southern Baptist Convention,
criticized two Baylor professors: a Mormon teaching in the Spanish/Portuguese
department and a religion professor on record as saying he believed evolution
played a part in the creation of the world.
Baylor President Herbert Reynolds
said Ziglar’s election as a convention officer didn’t make him an expert on
Baylor. Reynolds said to his knowledge Ziglar had never been on Baylor’s campus
and was part of a “priestly and self-anointed group” which “is smart enough to
know that if they can control the educational system of Baptists and our
publishing houses, they can be effective in producing the kind of clones which
will make willing followers of demagogues who seek to change the essential
characteristics of the Southern Baptist denomination.”
Jeopardized missions
New Orleans Baptist Theological
Seminary President Landrum Leavell warned that fragmentation could jeopardize
the convention’s cooperative work in missions and evangelism.
Cecil Day, director of a fundraising
program called Planned Growth in Giving, lamented that calls to designate gifts
outside the Cooperative Program unified budget in order to defund unpopular
causes were a throwback to the “society method” prior to 1925, when each
Baptist entity had to appeal directly to local churches for funding.
Southern Baptist evangelism leaders
meeting in Canada expressed “grave concern” about declining baptisms and called
for “an immediate end to the apparent lack of trust and Christian love that
results in confusion in our convention.” “We are not winning America to Christ,
we are losing,” the evangelism leaders said in a consensus statement adopted in
Vancouver, British Columbia. “Please, let us stop wasting our energies in
confusion and let us unite to seek the face of God and revival in this
generation.”
Furloughed Southern Baptist
missionary Al Cummins told Baptist Press in December he and other missionaries
were confused and angered that fussing and bickering were contributing to flat
budgets and no additional missionaries.
“I know there’s not a one of those
folks out there that would deliberately do this to hurt us, but somehow they’ve
got it in their heads that they’re going to hurt a seminary or a college,” he said.
“But, you know, those places have got millions of dollars. The only ones I’ve
seen so far that have been cut up have been those that are out there trying to
do the work of the Lord on the field.”
Former President Jimmy Carter said
the conservative resurgence had seriously damaged the spirit of Bold Mission
Thrust, a 25-year plan to present a Christian witness to every person in the
world by the year 2000.
“The emphasis on foreign missions,
Bold Mission Thrust and the Cooperative Program is much less than it was in
1977,” he said in an interview with Baptist Press while working on a Habitat
for Humanity project in New York. Carter said he had intentionally stayed aloof
from denominational struggles between the left and right because he was
uninterested in the convention’s political workings.
“One of the reasons I am a Southern
Baptist is because of the autonomy of the individual churches,” he said. “As
long as Maranatha Baptist Church [in Plains, Ga.] suits Rosalynn and me, that’s
where we will stay, and we will be happy as Christians and the right
relationship with God through Jesus Christ will not be adversely affected.”
Carter said conservatives at the
time were tied to a philosophy exemplified by Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority
and, to some extent, by super-church television ministries.
“I don’t feel compatible with what
has happened lately in the Southern Baptist Convention, but I also don’t have
any inclination to withdraw as a Southern Baptist,” he said.
That changed in 2000, when the
Southern Baptist Convention amended the Baptist Faith and Message to pronounce
that “while both men and women are gifted for service in the church, the office
of pastor is limited to men as qualified by Scripture.”
“My decision to sever my ties with
the Southern Baptist Convention, after six decades, was painful and difficult,”
Carter described his defection in an open letter published in 2009. “It was,
however, an unavoidable decision when the convention’s leaders, quoting a few
carefully selected Bible verses and claiming that Eve was created second to
Adam and was responsible for original sin, ordained that women must be
‘subservient’ to their husbands and prohibited from serving as deacons, pastors
or chaplains in the military service.”
“This was in conflict with my belief
— confirmed in the holy scriptures — that we are all equal in the eyes of God,”
he said.
In 2007 Carter, along with Jimmy
Allen, the last moderate elected as SBC president prior to the conservative
resurgence, launched a movement that became known as the New Baptist Covenant
seeking to unify U.S. Baptists across racial, geographical and theological
lines. Southern Baptist Convention leaders declined to be involved.
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