Last night I spoke to Dwight McKissic.
He gave me permission to tell you about it. I will not give you all the details of the conversation, but I feel you need to know the reason for the call.
Dwight had requested I give him a call because he was troubled -- deeply troubled. When I reached him in his office I found his tone soft and his spirit heavy. Dwight's wife was with him. He put me on the speaker phone so she could hear the conversation. They felt I might know what they were going through.
Dwight was ready to quit.
This pastor of a church affiliated with the Southern Baptist Conservatives of Texas Convention no longer felt welcome in the Southern Baptist Convention.
He had just sat through his first trustee meeting at SWBTS where white papers were distributed that in effect defined who was welcome at Southwestern in terms of a private prayer language.
Dwight McKissic, a conservative Southern Baptist pastor, a leader in the African American Christian community, a man who believes the Bible from cover to cover and affirms the BFM 2000 found out that he was not welcome at SWBTS.
The narrowing of the definition of what it means to be a Southern Baptist continues to occur.
Bear in mind that what happened at SWBTS yesterday is not a Southern Baptist Convention action. It is an institutional action.
Bear in mind as well that when the press releases are issued today regarding the action taken at the SWBTS trustee meeting there will be people who say, "Southern Baptist institutions can do as their trustees please."
That's true, but as I discovered when I opposed doctrinal policies and guidelines at the IMB that I felt went beyond the convention doctrinal statement (the 2000 BFM) --- not to mention the Bible --- I was told, "But the North American Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention has already passed a similar policy!"
It's as if the narrowing occurs slowly, one agency at a time, until people say, "It can't be wrong because everybody's doing it."
As I've said on many occasions I do not have a private prayer language, but I sure don't mind having in SBC leadership or on the mission field those Southern Baptists who do --- particularly since the Bible says we are not to forbid it (I Cor. 14:39).
I would consider myself an irenic conservative.
I don't mind people in leadership in any of our agencies who have a continualist view of the gifts. I would oppose the forced resignation, termination or attrition through non-promotion of those who have a private prayer language. I oppose restricting the service of God-called Southern Baptists simply because they have a gift of the Spirit that I don't possess.
Most of all, I oppose the demand that everyone conform to a particular doctrinal interpretation that goes beyond the BFM 2000. Once we start down this slippery slope of doctrinal conformity it will not stop until everyone who happens to disagree with those in control are ultimately excluded.
Fellow peace-loving, conservative Southern Baptists who believe the Bible and who can work with other conservatives who also believe the Bible but interpet some passages differently, had better wake up.
We are dying as a convention.
It is not a sudden death. It is slow and tortuous. We keep defining who is and who is not a 'true' Southern Baptist, and we continue to exclude conservative evangelical Southern Baptists who believe the Bible completely, but don't see eye to eye on different interpretations of the sacred text.
We are on the verge of collapsing from within. If we don't stop this narrowing of the parameters of cooperation and fellowship we will end up a small sect within fundamentalist Christianity. I am beginning to believe that some would not mind if that occurred.
Not for a minute do I believe this is the desire of the majority of Southern Baptists, but it's now time for voices that have been silent to be heard.
There are some of us in trustee positions who are now saying, "Enough is enough! We must allow for differences, we must appreciate one another's uniqueness, and we must not divide in fellowship and cooperation over doctrines that are not essential to the faith."
However, those of us who are trying to stop the doctrinal narrowing within our convention are now being called the problem.
Dwight McKissic was told by some yesterday that he was the problem.
He has been asked by a few SWBTS trustees to resign "for the sake of unity."
Dwight loves the SBC. He is not a trouble maker. He is shocked at the strong reaction (what he would call 'overreaction') of those who have risen to speak against him, or those like him.
Now it's time for Dwight to hear from those support him.
Dwight. Don't resign.
You can't.
Southern Baptists need you.
The kingdom of Christ needs you.
We appreciate your gracious spirit. We affirm your love for the Word of God. We join you in your desire to reach your community, yes the world, with the gospel of Jesus Christ. We admire your strong stand for truth.
Dwight McKissic, don't step down.
You are not the problem. You are not the cause of division.
You are part of the solution for healing in the SBC.
Perhaps you have come into the kingdom for such a time as this.
Make no mistake. The people who are seeking to exclude people like Dwight are the ones DEMANDING that everyone interprets the Bible the way they do. Irenic conservatives are at peace with their conservative brothers in Christ who disagree.
We must work hard to remain a convention where all evangelical conservative Baptists who believe the Bible are welcome to participate and cooperate in every aspect of convention ministry.
We are losing future leaders by the hundreds in the SBC because of our demand for doctrinal conformity on third tier doctrines. There is time for healing to occur, but we must act quickly. Will you be a part of the healing process?
Why don't you take a moment and write a note, or leave a comment to let Dwight, his wife, his family, and his church know that there are thousands of Southern Baptists who are glad to call them friends and fellow Southern Baptists.
You may reach him at . . .
Rev. Dwight McKissic
Cornerstone Baptist Church
5415 Matlock Road
Arlington, TX 76018
Phone: 817-468-0083
Fax: 817-468-0309
Email: cbc1983@airmail.net
Or you may leave a comment here. Dwight doesn't have a blog, but his daughter will copy the comments for him to read.
Dr. McKissic's passionate and articulate response to the narrowing of the doctrinal parameters of cooperation at SWBTS and other agencies is here.
In His Grace,
Wade Burleson
63 comments:
"Dwight McKissic was told by some yesterday that he was the problem.
He has been asked by a few SWBTS trustees to resign "'for the sake of unity.'"
This sounds so familiar... and familiar to all of us in ministry. Wade, thank you for posting this. We will be praying for Dwight.
Also, thank you for once again expressing our dire need and dire condition as Southern Baptists. I am right there with you!
David Cowan - lowercasechurch.com
Dwight McKissic is not the problem. He said some time ago he had thought about leaving and taking his church out of the SBC. Why would that be? Politics? Powers that will not receivr his non-cessationist viewpoint?
Now its out in the open. Everyone knows it and it appears Dr. McKissic has a backbone of steel too and not only speaks what God gives him but refuses to stop.
I belive SBC life as we know it is at a crossroads. It cannot survive like this any longer
No more top-down management, controling everything. No more selfish agandas. call in the auditors and watch the finances in a real way, lets require the agencies to be accountable.
I believe God is actually tearing all this down. But, is he tearing it down to rebuild? Or just tearing it down?
This entity called the SBC needs to repent. Repent of being proud and arrogant Thinking we have the whole truth and others only have a smaller portion of it. Repent of thinking that we are more spiritual that other parts of the body, Repent of taking scripture out of context and using it to slay our brothers and sisters.
God is looking for people of heart.
I'm concerned we're showing him religios fundamentalist, evangelical, I know better than you because I only read KJV.
Come Lord Jesus and deliver us.
Tear down everything and burn everything that is ungodly and raising itself against the kingdom and let us join you in building the kingdom with you. Give us agape for one another that we can really think more highly of others more than ourselves, for in these things we bring glory and honor to you, Father God.
I pray for Dwight McKissic, his family, I pray for Wade Burleson and his family, I pray for Ben Cole and his family, I pray for David Rogers. Father, in the difficult times I ask that you give them vision, covering and boldness to finish and complete the calling you have for them.
I pray that the power of the Holy Spirit will be on them and inside them working with them in their journeys, directing them clearly.
I pray that you send them helpers. Men who are willing to serve and help them. I pray that the convenant that grows with and around all these men will be of you and will not be broken.
Father, I petition you in great confidence, because I petition you in the mighty and lovely name of Jesus your son and Amen.
Wow.
I read on Ben Cole's site the statement that Pagie Patterson gave to the SWBTS trustees.
?????????
Please Dr. McKissic. Don't leave!
You are standing in the gap for those of us who can't say much right now because of our situation. (Work in a Security 3 region)
We're so sorry that you have to go through this, but God knew this was going to happen. He has prepared you for this time.
We are praying for you as you seek His will in the matter.
Blessings,
J
Thanks for posting this Wade.
Hey Dwight! Hang in there friend. I am not as concerned about the tougues issue as the way it is fought. Cessationist believe the truth but deny the power thereof. We can not allow them to dictate who is in and who is out. I was baptised a Southern Baptist when I was 12, I was discipled by SB's, I went to a SB university, and I went to the SB school you are a trustee for. I pastored an SB church for four years and have been with the IMB now for 11 years. They (whoever 'they' are) do not tell you what SB's are, I am telling you. We love the Word and we love what it says and we love obeying it. Push against the darkness hard Dwight. Gloom and doom and depression is a lie from the evil one. Read Revelation again- we win. You and me TOGETHER in Christ we win.
Bro. Dwight, I love you as my brother in Christ. Don't quit! Don't give up! I was with you at the SWBTS chapel meeting, and you said nothing wrong. I still can't believe they yanked you off the website. Let us pray for unity in our diversity...and we are diverse because God created us that way. Let us also pray for peace in the convention and SBC institutions. Keep preaching the gospel, my friend!
“Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears or tomorrow, the Tiber will run red with your blood!’
“The British are coming! The British are coming!
These cries of alarm are no more disturbing than the slow cancer of “doctrinal conformity” with the slogan, “We’ll stand if we have to stand alone!”
The big trouble is more and more standing are told to sit.
Please Lord; unite our hearts to lift up Jesus.
This prayer should resound.
“Fire unsigned missionaries!” makes Jesus cry,
Betrayed soldiers down.
“It’s only politics…not my concern.”
This fable has been around.
Awake, dear brother or you’ll become
Another soldier down.
Dwight McKissic is doomed to be another soldier down. For ever sore toe that Dilday stepped on, McKissic has stepped on ten, and look what the trustees of SWBTS did to Dilday.
In 1998, when Tom Eliff passed the presidency of the SBC to Page Patterson, he said, “All parasites and barnacles had been removed” which prompted this letter to be printed in the Baptist Standard.
A 68-year old ‘barnacle’
I have been a Southern Baptist for 60 of my 68 years. I have been a Sunbeam, G.A., Acteen, and Baptist Woman and have given to and promoted the Lottie Moon, Annie Armstrong and state missions offerings since I was 6. My dad and brother have been faithful pastors and SBC officers. I have taught S.S. classes for more than 40 years and believe the Bible from cover to cover. I’ve taken food to the grieving, worked in vacation Bible school, the nursery, the kitchen and camps, for starters.
In short I’m the kind of member Brother Tom Elliff would love to have in his church. How dare he call me and my kind a “growth” on the bottom of the “Ship of Zion” to be gotten rid of. May he fall overboard.
Joan Pennington Tallowood Church, Houston
The narrowing of what it means to be Southern Baptist started a long time ago.
Wade and McKissic, welcome to the ‘awaken.’
Rex Ray
I would second Rex Ray's comments. I am one of the barnacles that has clung on because of CP missions. At times it has been difficult to remain a supporter of the SBCP. I would quote General Schwartzkoph in his book, "It Doesn't Take a Hero". He was advised when he was thinking of getting out of the Army because of inept corrupt leadership, If people like you quit, THEY WIN. I wish we had military leadership of his caliber now! Hang in there and see how God uses you.
Wade,
this is an outrage. Plain and simple. We need to strengthen the discriminating authority of the bf&m2000.
if we can demand that our seminaries and agencies not tolerate anything less then the bf&m then we ought to also instruct them to not discriminate beyond it.
Please let Rev. Dwight know that he has been prayed for and will continue to be prayed for by me, my "pentacostal" elder (shhh...don't tell anybody that I have a tongue talker on staff) and our church. Southside is a blended church that sticks with the bf&m2000...which means our arms are wide open to folks who pray in tongues...and we even have one or two cessationist running around here...all together...all worshiping Christ...all serving in harmony. I made our church aware of this when it happened and I will let our leadership know tonight during staff meeting...please let Rev. McKissic know that we will pray for him tonight.
Stand strong, Dwight. Even if they all ask you to step down, it doesn't mean it's from God.
Stand strong in the Lord and in the power of His might.
Rev. McKissic:
God anticipated this, as He stuck a verse in the Bible about it:
John 16:1-2: "All this I have told you so that you will not go astray. They will put you out of the synagogue; in fact, a time is coming when anyone who kills you will think he is offering a service to God. (NIV)
Hang in there. You're not the reason for the controversy. The controversy ... and the problems it reveals ... is the reason you're there.
Brother McKissic - it appears that at some Baptists seminaries they spell the word "unity" as follows:
C-O-N-F-O-R-M-I-T-Y
I really dislike the misuse of words, don't you?
I'll pray for you and those who are maligning you.
Dwight:
You are a man of courage. My heart is heavy for you and with you. I will not ask you to stay in the SBC, as much as she needs you. I will ask you to follow the heart of Jesus. Do what Jesus would have you do, and take courage. Do not be afraid. The Lord is with you. He is on your side. The Word of God is on your side.
Remember the words of Jim Elliot: "He is no fool who gives up what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose."
blessings!
Pastor Wade, Thank you for this post...... Pastor McKissic, I will pray for you during this time of persecution. Dont be troubled , dont be heavy at heart. Maybe, just maybe this is your call from GOD to come out of Babylon and the system that is starting to permeate the SBC. Look at the Joshua Convergence, telling us to worship the SBC heroes of the past and give them gratitude. I say, let us worship God and trust only in Him ,not a man made institution that is full of pride.....Trust GOD and be thankfull for this time of persecution.
Dwight,
If your not welcome, then I am not welcome. You are not alone!
This entire issue at SWBTS coupled with last years IMB issue, are examples of a growing willingness of some in the SBC to keep fighting anybody that does not conform to their defintion of what a SB is. This attitude and ongoing infighting is, IMHO, one of the reasons some young pastors and young church plants are basically in name SBC, but in practice non-cooperating in SBC life either in giving or in participation.
This needs to stop. We must address the warring spirit among us. Somehow we need to affirm the BFM as the ONLY guide for cooperation in SBC life or each little entitiy in SBC life will be left to do whats right in their own eyes. Why even have the BFM? I see a growing opinion by some that it is never acceptable to fall beneath its teachings, but it is perfectly acceptable for some to think that they speak for all SB in going beyond its affirmations.
Prayerfully
Timothy Cowin
Rev. Dwight McKissic,
I want to encourage you during this tough time in your life. I have been praying for you. I hope you remain a trustee of SWBTS. We need men like you. Know that I am behind you.
Wade,
I am an optimist by nature, but this last year really makes me wonder where I fit in the SBC. I was always taught that we are the "BODY OF CHRIST." What healthy body cuts off one of it's members? I'm sick.
I am just a "guy in the pews" so I don't know anything about the "machinery" of the SBC. I can't really grasp why some are incrementally chipping away at boundaries of what encompasses the SBC.
I'd be interested to hear those who are trying to exlude pastors such as Dwight McKissic from positions of leadership in SBC agencies lay out their case. It would really help me to understand the issues by hearing a cogent argument that articulates the position that those who hold to a "continualist" position have no place in SBC life.
As I said, I am just a laymen and I don't have any institutional "connections". However, I have paid pretty close attention to this debate for the last year or so. My head may be in the sand on this but I still have never heard a clear statement as to why "continualists" like Dr. McKissic are not welcome in the SBC.
What is even more confusing to me is why people who are "cessationalists" but who tolerate "continualism" are also considered "suspect".
Dwight McKissic is not the problem. We are the problem. We have been uninterested and uninvolved, allowing those with such desires to "take care of that stuff." In so doing we have virtually granted carte blanche control to a few power brokers.
Brother McKissic, please don't give up or give in. You have my apology for my contribution of passivity which allowed such a situation as this to develop in the SBC. You have my prayers. You have my support.
Dwight,
My Brother in our Lord and King Jesus. I pray that His Holy Spirit will fill you to overflowing, that you may strengthened for the task at hand. I pray that our Mighty God will carry you through this time. I believe that He in His Sovereignty has placed you in this position "for such a time as this". Please seek the Father's guidance but my prayer is that His will for you will be to continue to stand in the gap.
Yours in Christ,
Chuck Bryce
Kevin, don't be discouraged! If you even think avbout leaving may the fleas of a thousand camels infest your armpits daily!
At the time of my previous comment I was not aware of the letter by Dr. McKissic and the statement by Dr. Patterson. I found both of them on Ben Cole's BLOG -- or by following links from Ben Cole's BLOG.
I retract my question about laying out the "cessationist" position. Whether you agree with his statement or not, Dr. Patterson does state the case for his position.
For me the question remains, "Does the recent activity regarding PPL stray sufficiently from 'traditional Baptist practice' that it is tantamount to annexing 'contempary charismatic practices' -- of a Vinyard / Pentecostal strain -- into SBC life?"
I don't see any evidence that "continualist" (i.e. PPL) practices that may be going on in the SBC are moving us to the threshold of becoming the same as Pentecostal or Vinyard groups.
I've now read Dr. Patterson's address to the BoT. I have also read Dr. McKissic's letter in response.
Oh that we would all be as gracious in our disent as Dr. McKissic.
My wife and I have been privileged to study at SWBTS and at NOBTS. It grieves us to see the school which we have loved and appreciated so much become involved in excluding fellow Baptists from participating in its operations. And to think that part of the controversy involves the gifts of the Spirit. I do not believe that God gave these gifts to create divisions within the body, but on the contrary, to help build up the body. Rev. McKissic's open confession of his spiritual gifts and their importance to him, and to his church (and others like them)was sincere and should have been received with rejoicing, rather than rejection.
Here we would like to express our support for him and for those who hold to similar convictions regarding the gifts of the Spirit.
May God openly and dramatically reveal his support for His servant Dwight McKissic.
Milton
Othoniel,
Allow me to answer your question.
Nobody is promoting a private prayer language.
You just have a man who is opposed to people asking "Do you have a private prayer language?" and if the anwswer is 'yes,' then the respondent is disqualified from service.
Nobody is promoting it.
People are protecting those who are being excluded because of it.
In His Grace,
wade
1revsview said,
Wade, do you honestly believe that you, Dwight and others with your kind of servant heart and inclusive spirit have a leadership future or "spiritual home" in this denominational enviornment?
Answer: I do.
I also think an awakening is coming to the SBC.
I am committed to maintain a positive spirit, a generous heart, and an iron will in the midst of it all.
Blessings,
wade
To all:
I humbly apologize. I had been told by a friend that Dwight had been President of the SBCT. He and his church are members of the SBCT, but he has never been its President. I have corrected the error.
He should be :)
Brother Wade,
Let me say that while I do not agree with you or Brother Mckissic on these issues, neither do I desire to see you leave. I say it is great that we are discussing and debating these issues instead of whether we believe the Bible or not.
Having said that, let me also say that as SB we serve together in a denomination that is directed by the local churches. Our Institutions are related to the local church through the Trustee System. If the Trustees make a decision that is against what most Baptist feel is correct, the place to deal with it is at the convention.
I will stay in the convention and serve here as long as I believe they convention is honoring God and His Word. When the day comes that I do not believe the SBC is doing that I will saturate her with my absence. All of the begging and letter writing campaigns in the world will do no good if I believe the SBC is not honoring God and His Word. If I use the threat to leave because I am not getting my way on an issue them you may be able to reel me back in by sending letters and begging me to stay.
Dr. McKissic, I do not desire to see you leave. It is not what I believe anyone wants. If God called you to be part of the SBC then you need to stay. However, If you feel the SBC is not honoring God or His Word, then my Brother, my prayers are with you as you seek to serve our Lord.
Blessings,
Tim
I had to look up "irenic" and am glad I did. Great word. Thank you for the education this morning. Here is what I found at the M-W Online:
Etymology: Greek eirEnikos, from eirEnE peace
: favoring, conducive to, or operating toward peace, moderation, or conciliation
Christ called us to a Ministry of Reconciliation. There is nothing Conciliatory about the actions you and others have highlighted. May we continue to pray for repentance and revival for the Christians in this country (and the world).
Leaving the SBC should not be a burden that you or Dwight or I or others bear. If God has called you to serve in the SBC, continue to do so until those who oppose you bear the burden of going against God's call on your life.
Dr. Glenn,
Forgive the long post, but I would propose to you that 'a private prayer language' is simply speaking in tongues privately.
“My hunch would be that “private prayer language” is a recent innovation designed to get around Baptist tendencies to be suspect of charismatic utterances. It falls under the “what you do at home is your own business” idea and served as an easy way to give people who have experienced ecstatic utterances, or prayed in the spirit, or whatever other term you wish to apply an out and assure mission boards and churches that they weren’t going to lead a charismatic service with everyone “speaking in tongues” or turn a mission church into a Benny Hinn type crusade."
For more background material on tongues I would read Baptist theologian Sam Storms
The quote in italics in my above comment is from David Eaton on Marty Duren's blog. I think he has some good insight.
Brother Wade,
I hate running two different comment streams, but this is your blog. You and I have been discussing this issue over at Brother Marty's blog.
Your interpretation of PPL as being the gift of tongues being spoken in private does not have a Scriptural basis. The only Scripture that I can see to support it is 1 Corinthians 14:2. If this is the basis the doctrine is removed from the context of Scripture. In the context of Scripture Paul is referencing the public use of this gift. To build a doctrine on this Scripture reveals a misuse of Scripture and will lead to an abuse of the gift. While you are free to observe the truth of that statement, and even promote the truth of that statement you are limited by Scripture to promote it in the context of the Scriptural setting and that being its use in public Worship.
Blessings,
Tim
Tim,
I would encourage you to study the writings of Baptist theologian Sam Storms enttiled Speaking in Tongues and the Southern Baptist Convention Part 1, and Speaking in Tongues and the Southern Baptist Convention Part II.
I think Sam does a good job answering your question from a Biblical perspective.
Dr. McKissic,
It looks like I will just be echoing what everyone else seems to be saying. Don't resign. Stay the course.
You have provided sound, scriptural support for your view. Of course, there are those who disagree, but the SBC has never been about doctrinal conformity. It is about brothers and sisters in Christ cooperating to do missions. How in the world can 40,000+ autonomous, independent churches agree on every single interpretation of scripture? The essence of being Southern Baptist is in your willingness to come together and support the Cooperative Program and its missions ministry with the common purpose of advancing the Kingdom. You and your congregation are as much a part of the mainstream of that as any other church in that group and there are plenty of other Southern Baptists who agree with you.
Hang in there.
SWBTS M.A.R.E. 1989
I would sincerely ask you not to leave Dr. McKissic, it would not be for the sake of unity as I see the Bible teaching the use of the word unity. I am sincerely praying for you and echo Alycees prayer. My husband and I do not agree with what has happened to you.
Marty Duren has said: "Stand strong, Dwight. Even if they all ask you to step down, it doesn't mean it's from God." and I agree.
Dwight,
Thank you for taking a principled, albeit lonely, stand against the continued narrowing of what beliefs are acceptable within the SBC. If this trend toward requiring conformity to one specific interpretation on every doctrine is not stopped, the SBC will collapse. I believe God has raised up people like you and Wade to shine a light on what is really happening behind the scenes in the SBC. I pray that God will sustain and strengthen you, your church, and your family in the coming months as you will undoubtedly be the subject of much criticism and even attacks. Just remember that there are many of us praying for you and encouraging you.
Wade, truer words were never spoken. Potential leaders ARE leaving the SBC by the hundreds, and it will continue to get worse unless men such as yourself and Dr. McKissic continue to stand firm against the political machine that has become the SBC.
Yesterday I heard George Will speak. He said, "its good to be a pessimist. You're right most of the time, and when you're wrong, you can be happy." I don't know if he borrowed that from someone else or not, but until you came along, I had no optimism about the future of the SBC. Even though I have already left, I now have some hope, because of you and people such as yourself. Thank you.
Wade and Dwight,
I am reminded of story of Esther and specifically this passage from Mordecai in Esther 4:14
"For if you remain silent at this time, relief and deliverance for the Jews (the body of Christ) will arise from another place, but you and your father's family (your church) will perish. And who knows but that you have come to royal position (this place of leadership) for such a time as this?"
May our response be like Esther "And if I perish, I perish"
Come what may, let us all be faithful to the Lord.
Troy
Wade,
thanks for the link. How do you figure Storms is Baptist?
My final conclusion:
-as long as the IMB refuses to discriminate beyond the scope of the BF&M2000 on doctrinal issues, we'll be sending our Lottie Moon money directly to our missionaries to Laos.
-if our other seminaries take the same route as swbts then we'll just not recommend out refer our students there.
-if the bf&m is ammended to discriminate officially against private prayer languages then we'll pull out all together.
We are not "congregational" and this is how our elders feel. We've prayed and met tonight and this is how we will speak. We're a church plant with a grand total of 150 folks reached in three or so years...we're no mega church...but...we are something and we can not support the IMB until this changes. We support foreign missionaries and will do what we can to send our dollars straight to them.
If this tent gets any smaller we're "bouncing", as these postmoderns like to say.
Wade,
I do not understand in all love and respect how anyone can say that no one is promoting anything. This would not be an issue had it not been promoted. I think people need to take a time out and look at the specifics. It was promoted and it is an agenda or else it would be private just as the title assigned suggests.
Snoofy
If you really knew Dr. Mckissic you would know very well that he would not be welcomed in the BGCT not would his convictions allow him to be a part of the BGCT.
first off, i admit my ignorance in fully understanding what all is going on here. i have tried to keep up and clear the blurry areas where i don't quite get it all. but here's my question, in 10 or 20 years, is this issue going to be such a hot seat issue? i can't help but wonder if this is just the "buzz" topic of the here and now? will time expel the weight of the current drama? i am a bit new to the SBC so i don't know fully the history behind these multi-tier issues...
i guess the reason I ask is because it's inevitable that Patterson and those who are against, for example, McKissic and you, Wade, will eventually die (i don't mean that negatively at all, just practically) so once they get on out of here (this world) will those who are more on your side of the debate be able to discuss and act more effectively and openly what it is you feel is so important?
that may not make much sense but maybe there is something in there you could speak to...
Wade and fellow bloggers,
I find it quite ironic that moderate Baptists were pushed out or marginalized so effectively, (and in fact, many Southern Baptists whose postings I have read on this blog say that they are glad that moderates are gone), while so many seem to be ready to come to the defense of PPL practitioners. That's not to derogate the PPL practitioners. No, not by any means, but just to point out that the moderates were equally worthy of defense.
Inerrancy seems to be the dividing line. Although he supports PPL, etc., Dr. McKissic is at least an inerrantist, as he clearly declared in his response to Dr. Patterson which was posted on his (Dr. McKissic's) website today.
So, it's okay for "irenic" Baptists to support Dr. McKissic as long as he's an inerrantist, but moderates are viewed, by and large, as not being worthy of a similarly principled defense. You are, perhaps, the exception, Wade, since you have stated on this blog that you would consider working with principled fellow Baptists who affirm the authority and sufficiency of scripture without using the term inerrancy. I wonder, would you also defend the rights of such Baptists to fill leadership, seminary, and missionary posts in the SBC as you imagine its future?
I hope the answer would be yes, but I'm not sure about that because of your own stated views on inerrancy, which is to say that you have stated that you consider yourself an inerrantist.
I'd like to argue here that inerrancy should be abandoned as the litmus test for who gets to participate in Southern Baptist life and who doesn't. Recognizing this is important not only for healing the split in the Convention, but also for reaching a lost world.
For progress to made, it needs to be acknowledged that for a Christian to believe that the Bible is authoritative and sufficient for Christian faith and practice while stopping short of using the word inerrancy is just as principled and intellectually valid a belief as holding the view that one should be able to practice a PPL, etc.
Before I proceed, I want to make it clear that by saying the Bible is not inerrant, that I am not anti-Bible. I was saved in a Baptist church at the age of 8, and I have never stopped believing in Jesus or the Bible. I have studied the Bible, both through faith and for faith, and also from a scholarly perspective. Some persons might consider the scholarly perspective inimical to faith, but I do not. I do not believe God intended us to turn off our minds when reading the Bible. I believe one has to read the Bible with one's mind and one's heart at the same time.
What I learned from careful study is that a careful and thorough reading of the Bible will demonstrate beyond doubt that the Bible is not inerrant in all particulars, at least not in an historical or literal sense.
Reading the text of Matthew, Mark, and Luke side-by-side in a book such as Throckmorton's GOSPEL PARALLELS reveals some of the difficulties of calling the Bible inerrant in a literal or historical sense. Reading the gospel accounts side-by-side, one becomes aware that there is a common core of material in each gospel(such as parables, and sayings of Jesus), while also drawing attention to the way that the gospel writers differed on certain details. Most of those details would be considered minor by most historians (and by me, too, for that matter), but the differences are there and are not easily explained away.
So, in a certain sense, the gospels themselves provide a hermeneutic model that mirrors the goals of an irenic church polity. In order to read the gospels together, we have to affirm the essentials at the core, without getting too bent out of shape about the non-essentials.
Wade, as your postings of last week amply demonstrated, God's love for man and his plan for the salvation of humankind are beautifully laid out from the earliest books of the Bible to the last. The "errors" (contradictions, discrepancies--whatever you want to call them)that do exist in Bible do not obscure the message of God's great love and salvation; they are like the fingerprints, dust, or residue of age that burnish, but do not dim the glory of a Renassance masterpiece, such as the Michelangelo's "Last Judgement" or Leonardo's "Last Supper." The flaws are there. But the Truth is not obscured.
I think its important to recognize that not calling the Bible inerrant is an intellectually and spiritually valid position if we want to reach a lost world, too. Because the college-educated unreached folks that I find myself witnessing to these days have read enough of the Bible to know that there are a few contradictions or inconsistencies. If I try to convince them that the Bible is inerrant, the conversation will hav ended before it even started.
If, on the other hand, I acknowledge that the Bible contains some apparent contradictions, but then I add that I still believe in the Living God of the Bible, and that it is possible to have a loving relationship with him, those persons are intrigued and want to know more. Bottom line: I think our message is more appealing when we say that we have a loving Savior to share with others, more so than when we try to say that we have all of the answers.
Craig from Georgia, Tim Rogers and Winning Truth,
I Corinthians 4:27 "If any man speak in an unknown tongue, let it be by two, or at the most by three, and that by course; and let one interpret. 28 But if there be no interpreter, let him keep silence in the church; and let him speak to himself, and to God."
What is speaking to yourself and God, if not a private prayer language? Earlier in the passage Paul states that he wants to pray both in the spirit and with understanding. Thus, in the context of the whole passage, we are told that prophesy is a better gift, but it can be personally edifying to speak in tongues privately. You may see it differently, but I have not found anyone who could conclusively and objectively refute this view (some assumptions are always invoked, which may or may not be correct).
As Wade has already pointed out, no one is promoting a private prayer language. We are asking just what you seem to favor-that it remain private and not be a subject of inquiry in the process of approving missionaries or Trustees.
Dr. McKissic, I am praying for you, and I hope you do not leave the SBC. There are many who support you, and if the vast majority of laymen ever wake up, they will demand to know what in the world the leaders of our institutions are doing.
Mr. Madden:
I don't desire to start a debate about inerrancy, but I would like to address some of your points. You say "Bottom line: I think our message is more appealing when we say that we have a loving Savior to share with others, more so than when we try to say that we have all of the answers."
I think you have flipped positions here. An inerrantist says this: it may contain apparent contradictions that are not easily explained, but those instances have not proven the Bible in error, and for these, we claim we don't have all the answers but have possible explanations and ultimately trust that God is sovereign over His Scriptures and we will be given understanding later...
You: The Bible clearly contains errors or contradictions, God wants us to use our minds, and if you are using your mind, you can clearly generate the answer to the inconsistencies: it is an apparent contradiction because it is a contradiction. In other words, in my human mind, I am smart enough to discern where the Bible errs- i.e. I have the answers. You can "explain away" a contradiction just as easily by classifying it as erroneous as you can exploring scenarios that would justify the text, without taking a fideistic position.
Outside of the General Baptists of England just prior to their embracing of universalism, where does your position draw its Baptist heritage?
All this to say that you must recognize that those who hold to inerrancy actually view their message as "more appealing," and more humbling.
Stephen,
If you want it to remain private - why was it brought up in a public manner. This is really the issue that is unbelievable to me. It is a no issue until some made it one. Dr. M should not have preached it in Chapel. Others asking for a statement are actually making it public. I think we can see this clearly or else there is an agenda! It is simple when you put the time line of events and see the issue based on events not preference. I stand were I have stood - an agenda has been promoted and thank God the trustees at SWBTS stood where they should have!!!!!
PPL.
This was not an issue until the IMB BoT brought it up last year.
They are the ones that have called attention to it!
Prior to this, if you publicly advocated speaking in tongues or did so in public, you were fired from the IMB. It went from this to...if you are ASKED if you have a PPL, and say yes, then you are excluded from service with the IMB.
Who brought this up? Not Dwight McKissic. The IMB Trustees...they are the reason we're in this debate. They chose to address something that was NOT an issue and make it an issue.
There was NOT a problem on the field with speaking in tongues...no one advocated it for long...if you did...you were gone.
Now? It's all out there.
I, for one, have no desire to ask people what they do or how they pray in private to God.
I disagree with the direction the SBC is heading....
Who else will the SBC dis-fellowship from?
j imb m
William Madden,
I disagree with your post, but I do agree that offering Christ to a lost world should be our common bond.
George,
Of course messengers have the right to establish doctrinal guidelines. They have. The BFM 2000. Insitutions don't have the right to go beyond it.
Ron West,
You hit the nail on the head when you said McKissic was chosen as a trustee when he led his church to quit the BGCT. The same with Jim Richards being selected as a trustee.
Patterson chose most of the trustees of SWBTS when he was president of the SBC. Then they chose him to be president of SWBTS. He was a personal friend of McKissic in their agreement on inerrancy. Talk about a system of the good old boys…
It seems most of you guys don’t get it. It’s not a question of McKissic quitting. It’s a question of him retiring and accepting what ever carrot they have to offer, or him being fired and showing Patterson for what he is—a hatchet man who is a self-appointed watchdog over doctrine of the SBC.
Rex Ray
Wade,
So if you say you disagree with my post, what are you saying? That moderate Baptists who affirm the authority and sufficiency of scripture (but stop short of using the term inerrancy) will never have a meaninful seat at the table in the future of the SBC as you imagine it?
I fail to see the logic in the post above, which says "The ones who are pushing the narrowing of parameters are the ones who are pushing their minority beliefs upon a body of believers that don't agree with the minority position."
In this context, it's exactly backward. It says that policy that excludes otherwise qualified missionaries from service does not narrow paramters, but a policy that permits these missionaries to serve does narrow parameters. That is, fewer people is permissive, but more people is restrictive.
If the issue under discussion were tithing or soul-winning, an argument based on the decisions of the majority would be laughable. As presented, the argument is either based in the (lack of) experiences of the majority or else it's based in guilt by association: "Charismatic/pentecostal preacher XYZ is flaky, therefore all charismatics are flaky."
In either case, the logic is faulty.
[Dr. Burleson: thanks for the heads up. I've sent an email to Dr. McKissic directly.]
Bro. Robin,
You are dead wrong in your conclusions.
Candidate consultants for the IMB were recommending missionaries for service that some trustees were rejecting --- not all trustees, just some trustees.
It depended on which Personnel Committee sub-group the candidate was brought before (up until 2006 you had subgroup A, B, and C subcommittees on the Personnel Committee of the IMB). No missionary candidate is appointed without Personnel Committee approval (then the full board). Because we appoint so many missionaries we have to break meet with candidates in several subgroups.
IMB administration and staff did not believe it was fair for a candidate to be either approved or rejected based upon which subcommittee he appeared before. Some trustees viewed things differently than others.
The administration requested clarification on the issue of 'what is a proper baptism.'
Let me remind you that no missionary candidate was ever brought before a personnel subgroup during the tenure of Dr. Jerry Rankin who had not been immersed. Missionary candidates go through an exhaustiive vetting process with staff (Candidate Consultants) prior to ever coming before the Personnel Committee. Nobody wants candidates rejected at the last minute by trustees, so Candidate Consultants do a thorough job. Further, no candidate has ever been brought before the Personnel Committee during the Rankin tenure who had not been immersed after coming to faith in Christ.
But some missionary candidates were brought before the subgroup who were baptized by immersion after having come to faith in Christ in churches, or by pastors and people, who were not Southern Baptist. Some trustees felt the missionary's baptism to be a biblical baptism, other trustees did not (it was not done in a church or by a person who believes in eternal security). Again, it depended upon which subgroup the candidate was brought before as to whether or not he was appointed.
Robin, NOBODY CAN COME BEFORE THE IMB BOARD OF TRUSTEES FOR APPROVAL AS A MISSIONARY CANDIDATE UNLESS A LOCAL SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH HAS HAS ALREADY ACCEPTED HIS BAPTISM. You must be a member of an SBC church for three years before becoming a missionary.
IMB staff and administration did not like the inconsistency of some trustees rejecting Southern Baptist missionary candidates, already accepted by a Southern Baptist Church, while other trustees accepted them. So they asked for a policy review on baptism.
IMB staff and administration got what they asked for --- and more. It was a policy adjustment on baptism AND tongues, initiated and pushed by trustee leadership.
I have asked since my time began on the Board (July 2005) for the rationale on changing the guidelines on tongues. The old guideline forbad speaking in tongues publicly (which I support). I was NEVER given an answer until this summer. The answer was simply --- 'There is no anecdotal evidence of a Charismatic problem on the field, but we don't need evidence of a problem --- this is a doctrinal matter.'
The staff and administration were not in favor of the changes to the guidelines. As I said, the old IMB policy on tongues forbad the public speaking of it on the field (a policy I endorse and support), but the new policy now moves into a person's private prayer closet. The new policy demands that what was private be made public by asking the missionary candidate 'Do you speak in tongues when you pray in private?' If the candidate tells the truth and says, 'yes,' he or she is now disqualified.
Of course, President Jerry Rankin has a private prayer language.
The new policy on baptism puts the emphasis on the doctrine and qualifications of the person (and or church) who baptizes the convert. The old policy asked the missionary applicant about his personal doctrine when he was baptized, and whether or not it was by immersion, after having come to faith in Christ.
The new guidelines now disqualify Southern Baptist people who affirm the BFM 2000, are members of a Southern Baptist church in good standing, an feel called by God to the mission field.
Again, Bro. Robin, you need to ask yourself the question, "Who is forcing their convictions on whom?
Bro. Robin, a question for you?
Could you serve with a Southern Baptist who prays in tongues privately, but never speaks in tongues publicly? Could you serve with a Southern Baptist who has been baptized by immersion after having come to faith in Christ, and is a member of a Southern Baptist Church that has accepted his/her baptism, but the baptism was in a Freewill Baptist Church? The missionary candidate did not believe, and does not believe he can lose his salvation, but the pastor who baptized him does? Can you serve with that missionary on the field?
I can. Irenic conservatives can.
Until we have a convention full of people who are peaceful in these matters will will not stop the narrowing and excluding until we have nobody left to kick out.
I already know what the two next issues will be --- I've drawn my line in the sand here because I don't have a dog in this hunt (I don't speak in tongues and I have been baptized in a SBC church).
So, Robin, I will not let you shift the blame for division.
It lies squarely in the lap of those who wish to demand other conform to their views of doctrinal positions that go well beyond the BFM 2000.
I, for one, will not let them get by with it.
In His Grace,
wade
George,
You are correct.
I should have been clearer in my answer.
Institutions like seminaries can have Abstracts of Faith --- that's why our boys from Emmanuel go to Southern and don't go to Southwestern. We have a choice, and our church would not agree to the position of SWBTS as articulated by their President.
HOWEVER, the International Mission Board is TOTALLY DIFFERENT.
There is only ONE IMB in the SBC.
THEY facilitate CHURCHES WHO SEND THE MISSIONARIES.
THE IMB exists to support the churches.
THE IMB SHOULD NOT GO BEYOND THE BFM 2000 --- it is a convention wide insitution --- you can pick one of six seminaries.
Thanks.
Among my most important core values, somewhere very close to the top of the list come:
1. A desire to properly understand the message of God's Word and submit to its authority in my daily life.
2. A desire to honor the desire of Jesus that his Body may be one, and that we not divide unnecessarily over 2nd and 3rd tier issues (recognizing at the same time the complexity of many 2nd tier issues).
3. A desire to see the Great Commission fulfilled, and comcomitant desire to see the kingdom resources God commends into our hands used with the best stewardship possible.
It is these very core values that lead me to continue to be a Southern Baptist, and at the same time, voice my opposition to the recent policy changes at the IMB, and now, for all practical purposes, at SWBTS.
As I read through the various things Bro. McKissic is saying, I sense a commitment on his part to these same core values. As long as serving under the auspices of the SBC continues to be the best option for applying in everyday ministry and practice these core values, I urge Bro. McKissic to stay the course, and commend him for his courage and convictions. Whenever the day comes (hopefully never, this side the Lord's return) when this is no longer the case, many of us may need to seek together a better way to be faithful to these core values.
Bro. Robin,
You are welcome.
Thank you for the gracious dialogue.
Wade
P.S. By the way, if I were Dwight, I'm not sure I would have spoken on the gift of tongues in the chapel service. But I'm not Dwight. If I were Paige, I definitely would not have censured the message by keeping it off the net. But I'm not Paige. Both these men come to the table with their own perceptions and love for Christ. I want neither excluded from service in the SBC.
I keep thinking that one day I'll wake up and this terrible nightmare will all be over, but instead, it keeps getting worse.
I'm with David Rogers, except I might go further - the die appears to be cast. Unless something dramatic happens to change the direction we are headed, we are on course to become an SBC that is no longer the best option he describes.
Wade, how is the direction going to change when leaders like Dr. Patterson continue the movement toward narrowing the parameters of cooperation? You seem to see opportunity for change to occur with the current leadership in place...
Greg,
Irenic conservative leaders need to be appointed. Trustees under the age of fifty need to be appointed. Young pastors need to show up at the SBC. Things can change, but there is a process that must be followed. All I'm attempting to do now is to get people informed.
Robin,
By the way, I just noticed something I missed in your last comment.
You said,
"I might add that Dr. Mc Kissic is arguing for a continualist perspective which would go against your support of the old policy."
You are incorrect. Under the old policy you could be a continualist. You can also be a continualist under the new policy (which I am). A continualist does not necesarilly speak in tongues (I don't), it's just that he sees Scripture does not explicitly teach the gift has ended.
George Jackson,
You made a good point that institutions have other governing documents other than the BFM, and Wade agreed with you.
But you’re dead wrong when you said the BFM 2000 is not a creed.
The BFM 1963 and the BFM 2000 are confessions just as there are statues of Billy Graham and Nebuchadnezzar.
The BFM 1963 and the statue of Billy Graham stand on their own ground. The RULES that go with the BFM 2000 and the statue of Nebuchadnezzar make them creeds where people are forced to obey.
The statue of Nebuchadnezzar was not bad, but the rules probably caused the people to revolt and kicked him out to eat grass.
I believe the time is coming soon that the majority will turn against the rules that force people to sign the BFM and there will be many leaders eating grass.
Rex Ray
Wade,
I like your "line in the sand" comment. You're right in saying that this issue is not about PPLs or baptism, but about a basic willingness to cooperate with those who disagree on nonessentials. If that's what it's about, you might as well draw your line in the sand here, before the debate turns to something you really care about.
The New England Holocaust Memorial bears an inscription that speaks to us now (and before anyone gets all huffy, please understand I am not insinuating anything about the people involved, just the kind of situation we're in):
They came first for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew.
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist.
Then they came for the Catholics, and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant.
Then they came for me, and by that time no one was left to speak up.
Publius,
Touche.
Question is...What would any of us do if we were a leader within the SBTC? BGCT? I am sure we have all the answers. We already have two camps. Lets add one more...SBCC,"the Southern Baptist Continualist Convention". How about the SBCPPL, "the Southern Baptist Convention of Private Prayer Language". I could go on in this silliness for hours. The real problem...All of us.But I do not think the current "private prayer" issue should be discussed further. It is secondary and not worth dividing over.Just an ignorant, first time pastor at the ripe old age of 49 throwing in his two cents.
Wade,
Let’s see—you said on Monday, October 30, “I have received probably 100 comments favorable for a statement of cooperation…there have been 4 that could be considered critical of it including the 2 that focused on Ron’s comment—for the sake of keeping the focus on the issue at hand I am closing the comment section.”
Well, well, well—what kind of truth and grace is that? Should Ron’s comment be deleted because two people didn’t like it? He wrote what he thought was the truth. Let’s hear what these two guys say. I thought discussion was the basis for your blog. To shut the post down is what Hitler did to newspapers.
Wade, a few times you have disappointed me, but this is the first time I’m angry. You say you want to change the SBC, but you’re not going to do it with your tail between your legs.
Rex Ray
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