'Mainstream' speakers
link SBC with Islamic terrorists
Feb 19, 2002
By Russell D. Moore
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (BP)--Southern Baptist
conservatives have more in common with Islamic terrorists than with
Baptist "moderates," charged speakers at the first annual
meeting of the "Mainstream Baptist Network" Feb. 15-16 in
Charlotte, N.C.
The "Mainstream" movement is made up of Baptists dissatisfied
with the conservative direction of the Southern Baptist Convention. Most
board members and leaders also are affiliated with the Baptist
quasi-denomination, the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship (CBF).
Phil Lineberger, pastor of Williams Trace Baptist Church in Sugar Land,
Texas, and national co-chair of the Mainstream Network, compared the
Southern Baptist Convention's adoption of the 2000 Baptist Faith and
Message statement of beliefs to radical Islam's terrorist ideology.
"We've learned about the dangers of religious fanaticism
lately," Lineberger said, comparing secularist Muslim Salman
Rushdie's analysis of fundamentalist Islam with his own analysis of
conservative Baptist confessionalism.
"Fundamentalists have more in common with each other than with
their respective religious roots," Lineberger said of conservative
Baptists and Islamic extremists. "It doesn't matter their god or
their holy book. Fundamentalists are always oppressive and destructive
in their behavior."
Lineberger then compared the confessional commitments of the SBC's six
seminaries to extremist Islamic training schools in the Middle East.
"Islamic seminaries have drowned out all unacceptable
stories," he said. "There is just one acceptable story now.
"That's why we're creating new seminaries and this is why these
seminaries are flourishing while [the SBC's] seminaries are dying,"
Lineberger said.
Enrollment at the SBC's seminaries, however, has moved from 12,914 for
the 1998-99 academic year to 13,591 for 1999-2000 and 14,185 for
2000-2001, using non-duplicating headcount statistics.
Of Lineberger's characterizations of Southern Baptists, R. Albert Mohler
Jr., president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, told Baptist
Press, "This kind of language is so irresponsible and incendiary
that I find it hard to believe that any Christian leader could speak
such things. This is a new low for those running further and further
from the Southern Baptist Convention. To compare the Baptist Faith and
Message to Islamic terrorism is so out of bounds that it needs no
refutation. I can only look with grief to such an insult to Christian
truth."
Concerning seminary enrollment, Mohler said, "The various and
sundry divinity schools established by the moderates have not impacted
the enrollment of our SBC seminaries in any significant way. The total
SBC enrollment is in a clear growth pattern with well over 14,000
students preparing for ministry in our seminaries."
During the Mainstream meeting, Becky Matheny, executive director of the
Baptist Heritage Council of Georgia, spoke of those individuals and
groups who had had various "dreams" for the future, such as
Jesus and Martin Luther King Jr. There have been other, less benevolent,
"dreams" articulated, however, she said.
"In 1978, two people had a dream to change what we knew as the
Southern Baptist Convention," Matheny said, in an apparent
reference to conservative resurgence leaders Paige Patterson and Paul
Pressler. "And in 2001, a group of people had a dream to destroy
the United States of America," apparently a reference to the
terrorists who drove hijacked planes into the World Trade Center towers
and the Pentagon.
Similarly, Mainstream Network leader David Currie called the
International Mission Board's move to ask missionaries to sign the
Baptist Faith and Message statement of beliefs an "act of spiritual
terrorism."
David Flick, a former director of missions in Oklahoma, likewise gave a
testimony in which he wrote that conservatives in Oklahoma were offended
when he asserted on an Internet forum that conservative Southern Baptist
attitudes and convictions were similar to those of fundamentalist
Muslims.
Such comments represented an escalation of the already spirited anti-SBC
rhetoric within the movement. Earlier in the week, the Biblical Recorder
newspaper reported on a "straightforward" letter sent by
Currie to North Carolina Baptists in which he referred to Southern
Baptist leaders as "a bunch of Pharisees." In the letter,
Currie suggested that the SBC's conservative leaders do not share the
same gospel of Jesus Christ with moderates, but instead embrace a
"perversion of the gospel" denounced by Jesus in the New
Testament.
The Mainstream Baptist Network is a coalition of state groups working
toward defeating conservative candidates for state convention offices.
At the 2000 General Assembly of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship in
Orlando, Fla., a breakout session trained CBF activists on using the
"Mainstream" groups to organize individuals uncomfortable with
the CBF to elect "moderate" candidates to state convention
office. Moderate-controlled state conventions could then direct funds
away from the SBC. Months later, the moderate-controlled Baptist General
Convention of Texas voted to divert funding from the six SBC seminaries,
the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission and the Executive
Committee.
|