INSIDE
* An Open Letter to the Regional Executive
Ministers Council
* Online Discussion
* Calendar
* Contributions
* New Mailing Address
An Open Letter to the
Regional Executive Ministers Council
[The following is an open letter from the
Council of the Association of Welcoming & Affirming Baptists to the Regional
Executive Ministers Council of the American Baptist Churches USA, which
issued a "pastoral letter" November 20, 2004, by a vote of 20 yes, 3 no, and
3 abstentions. The REMC letter is available online at:
http://www.abc-usa.org/news/20041202a.htm.]
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ:
We write to protest in the strongest possible terms your November 20th
"Pastoral Letter," its misleading form, and its predictably divisive
effects. We praise God for those among you with the clarity and savvy to
vote against this Trojan horse, when others seem to have simply and
disastrously failed to read the signs of the times. And we are grateful for
those who, by absence or abstention, prevented the affirmative vote from
being even higher. Despite its moderate overtures, we fear this letter
provides an ideal foundation, whether intended or not, for an impending
effort to dismiss all Welcoming and Affirming Baptists from the ABC.
The letter appears to have been written in a spirit of moderation and
concession. We appreciate that spirit whenever we find it, and we do not
judge your hearts, for clearly some of you intended a moderate peace. But
this makes the letterıs damage all the more tragic. You should be the
stewards of our peace and our polity. And yet, in seeking to address a
perceived problem, you have naively or intentionally introduced a real one,
a concrete "next step" down the road to wholesale denominational purge and
takeover. The pastoral letter is organized around a number of statements
and assumptions that are dangerously misleading, and its pacifying tone is
belied at every turn.
The clearest example of the letterıs misleading content is the way it covers
the normalizing of discrimination in commitments #1 ("Šrefrain from
recommending or approving persons who are practicing homosexualsŠ") and #2
("Šrefrain from conducting or participating in marriage ceremonies for
same-sex couples") with the whitewash of commitment #3 ("Šrefrain from
making stereotypical statements about homosexuals, participating in
homophobic behavior, making uninformed assumptions about homosexualsŠ").
Your commitment to refrain from bigotry in the third point is already
violated by the first two, which establish a second-class citizenship. To
refrain from recommending qualified individuals on the basis of sexual
orientation, to refrain from extending the ceremonies and ordinances of the
church to ALL of those who follow Christ, is already to participate in
homophobic behavior. And so the letter is inherently homophobic,
misleadingly so.
The second example is better veiled. The document seeks to portray itself
as a kind of "cease fire," making concessions to all sides. The concession
offered to the W&A churches, beyond the hollow promise of point #3, is found
in point #4 ("Šrefrain from making threats of withdrawal of resources and
threats of withdrawal of fellowship"). Of course, this is not a
"concession" to be granted; it is your job. Each of you is entrusted with
the stewardship of the health of the body of Christ. When you offer to
resist the exclusionary impulse of those urging dismissal as if it is a
concession, it misleads.
In fact, these thinly veiled threats continue unrestrained. Regions are
soliciting support for a sweeping array of changes to fundamental
denominational documents, changes which would a) institute a creedal litmus
test requiring an affirmation that the practice of homosexuality is
incompatible with Christian teaching for denominational membership; and b)
deny dismissed churches a right of appeal or an opportunity to join a
different region. These changes are being pushed in the name of our fund
raising, crippled because "The controversy over homosexuality has consumed
our agenda, our discussion time, and our energy." If the suggestion that we
will not raise money until the "homosexual issue" is settled according to
the proposals now circulating is not a threat to withhold mission giving, it
is difficult to know what would be.
Of course, the irony here is that the people who scream the loudest about
the distraction of the "homosexual issue" are the ones themselves causing
the distraction. No W&A church has ever tried to impose its beliefs about
homosexuality on anyone; neither have we as an association ever argued that
the denomination must adopt our biblical interpretation, as dearly as we
would like for that to happen. Our work has been to ensure that there are
some places within our denomination that are indeed affirming, not that
every place is. The distractions have come when others have tried
inappropriately to impose their anti-gay theology on others and on the
broader body. Strictly speaking, the distraction has not been the
"homosexual issue" but the issue of the hatred of homosexuality. From this
alone have come our major distractions, from the extraordinary and
undemocratic mail-in General Board resolution and the dismissal of good
churches and the resulting adjudications to this latest travesty.
The most pernicious example of misleading language is the slippery use of
the phrase, "We will voluntarily refrainŠ." It implies that you who voted
to ratify this letter have made commitments that are merely personal in your
individual ministries, rather than set policy for your regions or the
denomination as a whole. It is the height of naiveté to believe that the
letterıs use will be so restricted. Those who seek to appoint themselves as
purifiers and usurpers of Godıs judgment have never hesitated to twist and
misconstrue every provision of polity into a cudgel. They are like the
Pharisees, who believe man was made for the Sabbath and let Jesusı followers
go hungry, so passionately do they seek to create a new law where the new
heaven and the new earth ought to be. Even those of you who truly wished
for something moderate have delivered a prod into the hands of people who
would drive you to take sides. You will surely be approached, "lovingly,"
"in the name of Christ," and be held accountable for every jot and tittle of
this discriminatory statement you have signed.
Perhaps the most subtly misleading phrase is the claim that "The prevailing
view among American Baptists is that Œthe practice of homosexuality is
incompatible with Christian teachingsı." This misleads twice: once in
implying that such data exists, and again in implying that the Gospel is
somehow to be decided by majority vote. When the letter says, with a tone
of magnanimity, that "American Baptist polity allows for respectful
dissent," it misleads again, implying that this is some kind of favor we do
for the minority. We defend the rights of minorities so strongly in the ABC
because we have learned better than most that sometimes the minority is
right. Time and again, the broad public consensus is that it is too early
to make a decision about questions of Welcome and Affirmation: some
constitutional amendments have passed, and some have failed, and while some
churches demonize this particular minority, much of America is increasingly
committed to extending full civil and human rights. Like the general
public, the people of our denomination have consistently made a similar
statement: it is too soon to tell what God is doing here. What if we had
subjected the ordination of women or racial equality to a premature majority
vote? When has there been a single moment of history when the reigning
majority did not perpetrate crimes against Christıs followers? We prefer
the reign of Christ. It is a reign in which minorities are welcomed, not
merely tolerated; and affirmed, not merely endured just so long as they know
their place, far from "regional and national levels."
Which brings us to the final example of misleading, that ensconced most
clearly in point #5 ("Špray and work constructively to embrace our unity in
Jesus Christ and promote our fidelity to his teachings"). The implication
that someone can somehow derive discrimination and bigotry from the
teachings of Christ is an outrage to all who would live a Christ-like life.
Although Scripture sometimes portrays Jesus as harsh toward women or people
of a different tribe, we would all deny that Christ stands for sexism or
racism. How much harder it is to infer a hatred of homosexuality from his
teachings on the topic of homosexuality! ‹ Jesus said nothing about it!
What Jesus did teach was to love our neighbors as ourselves: what kind of
love is shown in offering LGBT Christians a second-class citizenship? He
taught us to do unto others as we would have them do unto us: what kind of
mutuality is shown by points #1 and 2? Even if we are seen as weeds in the
denomination, is Christıs commandment not to allow the weeds and the wheat
to grow together? The point of that commandment is that we humans have
neither the wisdom nor the right to judge each other; such judgment belongs
to God. It is this kind of humility, which says not "God, I thank you that
I am not like other people" but rather "God, be merciful to me, a sinner,"
that forms the core of Christıs teachings. We always strive to study and
promote the teachings of Christ; we urge you to do the same.
We write with uncharacteristic stridency. We have always approached our
detractors with goodwill and love, and have worked tirelessly for the
preservation of the unity of this denomination. But ultimately, our passion
about this offense does not derive from our passion for this denomination.
Our passion is for the Good News of Godıs love, proclaimed in the life,
death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. We write because we believe the
letter is wrong and unchristian, and will become a tool for the powers and
principalities in dismantling the capacity of the ABC to proclaim this Good
News. By means of misleading tools like this, the powers may well "win,"
insofar as they succeed in dismissing all who believe that Christıs love is
also for Godıs lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, questioning, and allied
children. But they will be like soldiers at the foot of the cross, gambling
over Christıs clothes: such will be the meager spoils of their victory. For
us, and our households, of whatever blessed configuration ordained by God,
we will serve the Lord.
We implore all American Baptists to reject the moderate-seeming but utterly
divisive content of your letter, and to insist again that we will have no
creed, no litmus test, and no purge in our denomination. Instead, let us
affirm again, that God has called us ‹ ALL of us ‹ together for a mission
and a purpose, and let us take up that work.
In the name of Christ,
The Council of the Association of Welcoming & Affirming Baptists
Copy of
letter in Adobe PDF
News
To join an online discussion about the state of the American Baptist
Churches and the witness of welcoming and affirming Baptists, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/awabdiscernment/
Calendar
* Daniel Pryfogle, the
Association's interim director, will preach this Sunday, Jan. 16, 2005, at
11 a.m. at Madison Avenue Baptist Church in New York City. Later that day a
forum for Association members and friends will be held at 1:30 p.m. at
Judson Memorial Baptist Church, also in New York. The purpose of the forum
is to discuss the present situation in American Baptist life and discern the
faithful response of welcoming and affirming Baptists.
* Welcoming movement leaders from the Disciples of Christ and the United
Church of Christ will meet with the Alliance of Baptists and AWAB
representatives Feb. 2, 2005, in Columbus, Ohio, for an exploration of joint
ministry around LGBT issues. If you are interested in being part of this
exciting conversation about the future, please e-mail Daniel Pryfogle at
daniel@wabaptists.org.
* More than 90 people have registered for the February 18-19, 2005,
Rochester summit of American Baptist leaders to discuss a collaborative
response to anti-gay actions in the denomination. Representatives of the
Association, Baptist Peace Fellowship of North America, Hispanic Caucus, the
Coalition for Baptist Principles, African-American Caucus, and the Roger
Williams Fellowship will participate. To learn more, contact the Rev. Alan
Newton, executive minister of the American Baptist Churches of the
Rochester/Genesee Region, at 585-436-9233 or
anewton@localnet.com.
* The 2005 Alliance of Baptists Convocation will be held April 1-3, 2005, at
First Baptist Church, Greenville, S.C. To learn more, go to:
http://www.allianceofbaptists.org
* The American Baptist Biennial will be held July 1-3, 2005, in Denver.
AWAB's National Retreat will follow July 4-7 in Boulder. Stay tuned to
www.wabaptists.org for more details.
* The 20th Annual Gathering of the Baptist Peace Fellowship of North
America is slated for August 1 - 6, 2005, at Linfield College in
McMinnville, Oregon. To learn more, go to:
http://www.bpfna.org
Contributions
Association members and friends contributed more than $25,000 in year-end
gifts. We praise God for such incredible generosity! Every gift is a
testimony to the deepness and wideness of God's love for all God's children.
These gifts support the ministry of the Association, including this online
communication.
If you are looking for a way to say "Yes!" to welcome and affirmation,
consider making a tax-deductible individual gift today. The Association is
grateful for every gift, no matter the size.
For your convenience, the Association now offers a secure online giving
option at:
http://www.wabaptists.org/donations.htm
New Mailing Address
Please note that the Association has a new mailing address:
The Association of Welcoming & Affirming Baptists
P.O. Box 1423
Cary, North Carolina 27512
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full inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons within
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The Peace of Christ be with you. |