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National
“Mainstream” network leader serves on board of pro-homosexual group
By
Don Hinkle
This
article was published August
10, 2000 by Baptist Press, the official news agency
of the Southern Baptist Convention
NASHVILLE,
Tenn. (BP)--David Currie, who is at the forefront of a national anti-Southern
Baptist Convention campaign, was lauded in a recent Texas Baptist Standard
editorial for his group's "strategy" in keeping the Baptist General
Convention of Texas from going along with the Southern Baptist Convention's
"juggernaut to the right."
However,
it is precisely Currie's close ties to persons and organizations with
theological and political views to the "extreme left" that has raised
concerns within the Southern Baptist Convention over his influence on churches
in Texas and elsewhere -- as well as the influence of the dissident Cooperative
Baptist Fellowship, in which Currie has served as chairman of the CBF
Coordinating Council's finance task group.
While
not mentioning Currie by name, the July 10 editorial by Baptist Standard editor
Marv Knox stated that Texas Baptists "can express thanks for," among
several factors, "the stalwart and supportive strategy of Texas Baptists
Committed" which Currie leads for distancing the state convention from the
SBC, to the point of possible BGCT budget cuts that "reflect displeasure
with the SBC."
Under
Currie's leadership, Texas Baptists Committed has been working in harmony with
the CBF in creating opposition in Texas and elsewhere to traditional Southern
Baptist missions and theology, say leaders among conservative SBC laymen's
groups.
While
Currie has stated that "I do not support homosexuality or abortion,"
the Missouri Baptist Laymen's Association expressed concern in a recent
newsletter over the relationship CBF leaders like Currie have with
pro-homosexual and pro-abortion groups.
Currie serves on the board of directors for The Interfaith Alliance, an
ecumenical organization whose leaders promote pro-homosexual, pro-abortion
agendas. Yet Currie claims not to know where the organization stands on such
volatile issues as homosexuality and abortion.
"I
have been on [The Interfaith Alliance] board for four years and have never
missed a meeting," Currie declared. "The issues of homosexuality and
abortion have never been mentioned during a meeting, nor to me in private
conversation by a fellow [Interfaith Alliance board] member," Currie stated
in Texas Baptists Committed's newsletter in March 1999.
But
according to the Viewpoint newsletter of the Missouri Baptist Laymen's
Association:
--
The Interfaith Alliance, or TIA, has launched a "Bridge Building
Project" to "engage in partnership" various groups, including
"gay men and lesbians," to "increase our diversity and strengthen
our movement," according to the organization's Internet site. The Bridge
Building Project will encompass both "aggressive outreach and
infrastructure building," along with "training, networking
opportunities, publications, research and other support" to "include
these new voices in discussions about civil society." (TIA's executive
director, incidentally, is C. Welton Gaddy, a Baptist minister and an oft-quoted
critic of religious conservatives.)
--
The Interfaith Alliance has released an "issue paper," titled,
"Discrimination Against Gays and Lesbians in Housing, Employment, and
Education," supportive of the controversial Employment Non-Discrimination
Act percolating in Congress since the mid-1990s. The bill would establish
homosexuality, under the title of "sexual orientation," as a
classification deserving protection in the same way race, ethnicity, gender,
age, national origin, religion and disability now have protected status in the
workplace. The Interfaith Alliance issue paper charges that religious
conservatives have "propagated a series of harmful myths about the gay and
lesbian community," such as "using the metaphor of disease, suggesting
that homosexuals can and must be 'cured' by programs of 'reparative therapy' in
order to live a healthy lifestyle ... ."
--
Five TIA board members who have served alongside Currie signed a controversial
document in January calling for the "full inclusion" of homosexuals in
congregational life, "including their ordination and the blessing of
same-sex unions." The document was issued by the Sexuality Information and
Education Council of the United States (SIECUS).
--
The Interfaith Alliance is one of 10 organizations that produced a publication
titled, "Just the Facts About Sexual Orientation and Youth: A Primer for
Principals, Educators and School Personnel." The publication, sent last
fall to 15,000 school districts nationwide, was initiated by the Gay, Lesbian
and Straight Education Network (GLSEN), which describes itself as the nation's
largest organization combating anti-homosexual bias in America's schools.
--
The Interfaith Alliance, through its Walter Cronkite Faith and Freedom Award,
has honored pro-homosexual activists. Earlier this year James C. Miller,
executive minister of the Rhode Island State Council of Churches, was presented
the award after he advocated the inclusion of homosexuals in the Boy Scouts of
America. In 1999 it presented the award to Donna Red Wing, who led an initiative
to bring together the faith community with homosexuals in "challenging
anti-gay tolerance from the religious right," according to a May 4 TIA
press release.
--
Four TIA board members signed a 1996 Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights (RCAR,
now known as the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice) letter supporting
President Clinton's veto of a bill that would have banned the gruesome
partial-birth abortion procedure.
"I
do not know about beliefs of some people I serve with on boards," Currie
said in a Texas Baptists Committed newsletter column after he was challenged by
the MBLA's Viewpoint newsletter earlier this year. "I have never asked them
about these issues. Prying into people's personal lives is not my nature."
Bill
Streich, research director for the Texas Baptist Laymen's Association, meanwhile
reacted, "What individual board members believe is important because their
policy-making decisions are indeed based on what they believe.
"The
Interfaith Alliance's pro-homosexual, pro-abortion positions should concern any
board member who claims to believe otherwise," Streich said. "Yet
Currie seems content in encouraging Texas Baptists to support TIA while excusing
himself from any accountability for the ungodly positions it advocates."
Such
relationships are "symbolic of what's wrong with the CBF and why there has
been such concern about the growing influence of the CBF within our state
conventions," the Missouri Baptist Laymen's Association newsletter warned.
"For
too long, CBF leaders [like Currie] have been allowed to redefine the
pro-homosexual/pro-abortion religious left as 'mainstream,' while at the same
time portraying conservative, Bible-believing Southern Baptists as
'fundamentalists' and conservative Christian organizations like Focus on the
Family as 'religious extremists,'" the newsletter noted.
Kerry
Messer, president of the MBLA, also expressed concern over the condemnation
directed at Christian leaders like James Dobson.
"The
willingness of top CBF leadership to condemn conservative, pro-life Christian
leaders like James Dobson while at the same time aligning themselves with
pro-homosexual, pro-abortion advocates of the religious/political Left
demonstrates clearly the degree to which liberalism has influenced the
leadership ranks of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship."
Currie
led a "breakout session" during the CBF's General Assembly this year
on "How Mainstream Baptist Organizations Assist CBF in Your State,"
with "Mainstream" being used as an anti-SBC banner in various states.
Currie
and Houston businessman John Baugh have traveled to 12 states to help organize
so-called "Mainstream" groups, according to a June 1 report in the
Baptists Today journal.
The
Baptist Standard's endorsement of Currie and Texas Baptists Committed will
surely add to the confusion in Texas caused by conflicting statements by BGCT
leaders about relations to traditional Southern Baptists and Southern Baptist
causes. Knox and the Baptist Standard have sided with Currie in what is sure to
be a series of public relations moves aimed at distancing the BGCT from
conservative Southern Baptists in Texas.
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