Difference between pages "Suppression of alternatives to evolution" and "Southern Baptist Convention"

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There exists widespread suppression of [[creationism]] and [[intelligent design]], ideas which offer alternative explanations of origins than does the [[theory of evolution]].
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The '''Southern Baptist Convention''' or '''SBC''' is the largest organization of [[Baptists]]. It has over 16 million members in 42,000 churches across America, with greatest strength in the South.<ref>There are four other national groups, [[American Baptist Churches USA|American Baptist Churches]] (strongest in the North), National Baptist Convention (African Americans, strong in the South and northern cities), the
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Conservative Baptist Association, and the Progressive
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National Baptist Convention (a more liberal body of African Americans, strong in the South and northern cities).</ref> It also sponsors 10,000 missionaries in 157 countries. It holds 41 state conventions and one national convention annually, and in recent years it tends to identify with [[Conservative Christianity|conservative Christian]] values and supports Biblical [[inerrancy]].  Insistence on baptism by immersion, as it is presented in the Bible, fulfills the twin symbolism of washing from sin and of death and rebirth, as well as pointing to the Baptists' conviction that Scripture is the complete and sufficient basis of the Christian faith.  
  
== History ==
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Leonard (2000) explores the bitter internal divisions within the SBC since 1979. Conflict between fundamentalist and  moderate factions at the national level has continued to impact state conventions, Baptist associations, and local congregations. Important recent changes include the establishment of relationships with Independent Baptists and other ethnic and racial groups, the emergence of mega-churches with very powerful ministers and multi-million-dollar budgets, the reorganization of stewardship programs, and the founding of new theological schools.<ref>Bill J. Leonard, "Baptists in the South: a New Connectionalism." ''American Baptist Quarterly'' 2000 19(3): 208-221.</ref> 
  
Until [[Charles Darwin]] popularised<ref>Darwin didn't invent the idea.  Similar ideas had been around for a long time, and even Charles Darwin's uncle Erasmus was an evolutionist.</ref> the idea of [[Theory of evolution|evolution]] in the middle of the 19th century, most people including the vast majority of scientists were creationists.
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Southern Baptists are facing a membership decline that could shrink the nation's largest Protestant denomination by nearly half in 40 years, its convention president Rev. Johnny Hunt, warned in June 2009.<ref>Dylan T. Lovan, "Southern Baptist Convention opens in Kentucky," [http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gLeJCkvML4zZQ0aAUjlwP_Vthi5wD990LDD03 Associated Press Jun 23, 2009]</ref>
Over the next 50 to 100 years, however, evolution came to be the ruling paradigm in the biological sciences in particular, and science in general.
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In the early 1960s, creationism began a resurgence, followed a few decades later by intelligent design.
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==History==
Once these ideas had started to gain a degree of popularity, however, many people, committed to evolutionary thought, began to oppose these competing views of the history of life.
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American Baptists emerged in the 18th century with bases in Rhode Island, Virginia and Pennsylvania. Influenced by the [[First Great Awakening]] they adopted [[revivals]]. By 1800-1830 they were major participants in the [[Second Great Awakening]]. Most historians view these evangelicals as radicals who were on society's fringe during the colonial period, only to become conservative by the nineteenth century after they had achieved social acceptance.<ref>But for an  alternative view see Janet Moore Lindman, ''Bodies of Belief: Baptist Community in Early America'' (2008)</ref>
(These people generally consider Intelligent design to be creationism in disguise, although there are significant differences between the two ideas.)
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===Growth===
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The denomination grew very rapidly throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, becoming the largest Protestant denomination in the U.S. by the 1870s.  After 1945 it began to expand outside the South, first to the western states then to the north. Patterson (1979) attributes the growth of Southern Baptists since the 18th century, apart from sociological, demographic, and cultural influences, to religious factors: 1) heritage of the revival emphasis, 2) denominational pride growing out of Landmark exclusiveness, 3) development of efficient and adaptable denominational organizations, 4) sense of denominational loyalty, 5) massive program of tuition-free theological education, 6) dispersion of Southern Baptists across the United States, and 7) a gift for organizing and promoting programs and methods to share the gospel in a more effective way.
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====1955====
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By 1955 the SBC counted 8,200,000 members, and were baptising an average 1,000 new members a day.  The 30,000 affiliated churches reached 24 states, but were still heavily concentrated in the South. Local churches were worth $1.2 billion, up from $276 million in 1945. Yearly contributions reached $305 million.  Sunday school membership was 6,400,000. The denomination supported 30 colleges and universities, 22 junior colleges, six seminaries, eight academies and four Bible schools. Most were still small and the total enrollment was only 50,080. They ran 33 hospitals and 23 magazines.<ref>"The Oldtime Religion," [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,893230,00.html ''Time'' Dec. 05, 1955]</ref>
  
However, this opposition has not been merely academic debate of the merits of the competing ideas, but a concerted effort to suppress creationism and intelligent design.
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===Theology===
This opposition has included keeping the ideas out of the education system and marginalising or ridiculing the ideas in the mass media.
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Baptist theology has slowly changed since the formation of the SBC in 1845, but at no time was there ever a monolithic set of Baptist beliefs. Baptist theology has the primary goal of being faithful to the Bible, and it has been influenced by many trends in theology and general American culture. Race relations, for example, affected Baptist theology. Southern Baptist theology has been part of historic Christian orthodoxy, yet it has exhibited diversity on some issues, including Calvinism-Arminianism, conservatism-progressivism, and the millennium.  In the theological conflicts of the 1980s and 1990s both sides have claimed historical foundations for their positions. Early Baptist theologians like James Boyce were heavily influenced by Princeton theologians and their theories of biblical inerrancy. In the twentieth century leaders like E. Y. Mullins did not speak of inerrancy but tended to emphasize the infallibility of the Bible's religious message.<ref>Paul Basden, ''Has Our Theology Changed? Southern Baptist Thought since 1845.'' (1994)</ref>
  
{{QuoteBox|It appears from various reports reaching this office, that a trend is developing in the halls of Academe … that Liberalism’s great contribution to American education, namely “Academic Freedom” has become a victim of incest, having been raped by its own sires … . [A] former Louisiana State Senator … said instances [of] … pro-creationism professors and teachers … being dismissed have begun to proliferate in the past ten years … highly-qualified educators denied tenure or otherwise discriminated against simply because they hold views or engage in activities which oppose the tenets of [evolutionism].<ref>Haney, K., Academic freedom’s double standard, ''Christian Times'', p. 4, 28 June 1985, quoted by Bergman, 1995.</ref>}}
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Calvinist themes of predestination faded away as revivalism pushed Baptists in an [[Arminian]] direction. Anti-Catholicism—a powerful force in the 1920s—faded away after the election of [[John F. Kennedy]] in 1960 ended fears of a Vatican takeover of the U.S., and the emergence of the abortion issue in the 1970s saw prominent Baptists form an informal political alliance with the Catholic bishops. There have also been changes in the theology of such topics as the Bible, predestination, the atonement, perseverance and apostasy, the Christian life, the church, church leaders, the priesthood of all believers, the millennium, philosophy of religion, Christian ethics, and religious liberty. On the other hand, there had been little or no change regarding God, the Trinity, Jesus Christ, sin, and the ordinances.<ref>Paul Basden, ''Has Our Theology Changed? Southern Baptist Thought since 1845.'' (1994)</ref>
  
The movie ''[[Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed]]'' with [[Ben Stein]] released in April 2008 exposes the suppression of alternatives to evolution.
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===Landmarkism===
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Wamble (1964) surveys the Landmark theology which emerged in Tennessee in the 1850s, was quite strong by 1900, and can still be found among Baptists, even though the organized Landmarker (or "Landmarkean") movement has largely disappeared. Landmarkism insists upon Baptist exclusivism because (1) only Baptist ministers are authentic gospel ministers. (2) Only baptism by immersion, authorized by an authentic minister, upon an authentic candidate (believer), as a symbol (not means) of salvation, is true baptism. (3) The church is a visible, local and independent congregation, exercising plenary authority in a democratic manner, and only Baptist churches fit this description. (4) Baptist churches –unlike all other churches—have an unbroken succession since the time of Christ.<ref>Hugh  Wamble, "Landmarkism: Doctrinaire Ecclesiology among Baptists." ''Church History'' 1964 33(4): 429-447. [ http://www.jstor.org/stable/3162835  in JSTOR]</ref>  Landmarkers refuse to recognize the legitimacy of other denominations, or the validity of their baptisms. By 1859 the movement failed to take control of the Southern Baptist Convention, and always remained a minority viewpoint.
  
== Ideology ==
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J. R. Graves, a Baptist pastor in Nashville, Tennessee, during the 1840s-1860s, became the leader of the Landmark movement among Baptists, asserting that Southern Baptists alone possessed the true version of Christianity.<ref>Chad W. Hall, “When Orphans Became Heirs: J. R. Graves and the Landmark Baptists,” ''Baptist History and Heritage'' 2002 37(1): 112-127.</ref>  James Madison Pendleton (1811-1891) was one of the "Great Triumvirate" of the Landmark Movement. Not as intensely doctrinaire as James R. Graves or Amos Cooper Dayton, he accepted the concept of the universal church, never adhered to the theory of Baptist successionism, and was able and willing to work within the framework of Baptist conventions and societies in a way that many Landmarkists were unable to do. He named the movement with his book, ''An Old Landmark Reset'' (1854). His basic contribution to the Landmark movement lay in his refusal to accept non-immersionists (non-Baptists) as gospel ministers. Although born in the South, he favored the gradual emancipation of slaves, a position which finally forced him out of his pastorate in Tennessee during the Civil War. He subsequently moved to Ohio and later to Pennsylvania. He wrote numerous works, two of which have significantly influenced American Baptist practice and thought until recent days: ''Church Manual'' (1867) and ''Christian Doctrines: A Compendium of Theology'' (1878).<ref>Bob Compton, "J. M. Pendleton: a Nineteenth-century Baptist Statesman (1811-1891)". ''Baptist History and Heritage'' 1975 10(1): 28-35.</ref> Amos Cooper Dayton (1813-1865) was the most prolific Landmarkean writer, and indeed was the first Baptist in the South to write a religious novel, ''Theodosia Ernest'' (1857). It covered baptism and church polity. Seeking to disseminate Baptist doctrine through the medium of fiction, he defined the church in one of his novels as a "local" group, organized independently of Christian people - a definition of the church which became a major cornerstone of Landmarkism. Beginning as a Presbyterian, he became a Baptist in 1852, and launched his literary career the following year. He authored 13 volumes of fiction and theology and contributed nearly 1,000 articles to 20 different religious periodicals.<ref>James E. Taulman, "The Life and Writings of Amos Cooper Dayton (1813-1865)." ''Baptist History and Heritage'' 1975 10(1): 36-43.</ref>
The motivation for suppressing views opposed to evolution includes anti-theistic ideologies.
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Richard Lewontin:{{QuoteBox|We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs, in spite of its failure to fulfill many of its extravagant promises of health and life, in spite of the tolerance of the scientific community for unsubstantiated just-so stories, because we have a prior commitment, a commitment to materialism.<br /><br />It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our ''a priori'' adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated. Moreover, that materialism is an absolute, for we cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door.<ref>Lewontin, Richard, Billions and billions of demons, ''The New York Review'', p. 31, 9 January 1997, quoted in [http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/703/ Amazing admission], ''Creation'' 20(3):24, June 1998.</ref>}}
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In 1898 a major controversy arose when Baptist church
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historian Dr. William Heth Whitsitt challenged the Landmarkean belief that, from St. Peter to contemporary times, an unbroken chain of churches practiced immersion in the baptismal rite and thereby established themselves as part of the "one, true church." Texas Baptists, led by Benajah Harvey Carroll, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Waco, organized the Landmarkeans to reject Whitsitt's findings.
  
== Vilification ==
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The central idea of Landmarkism is the authority of the local congregation in Baptist ecclesiology. Landmarkism can be viewed as a doctrinal aberration from the  English and early American Baptist theology and polity. Tull (1975) traces the movement from its 1851 beginning in Cotton Grove, Tennessee to its present small remnant. In its full intensity Landmarkism was sectarian in its emphasis on the role of the local church, its denial of the validity of "alien" immersion, an adherence to strict, local church communion, and a hostile response to the ecumenical movement - all of which, Tull concludes, are quite foreign to the ecclesiological traditions which had been developed by English and American Baptists in the 17th and 18th centuries.  
Anti-creationists have often openly vilified creation and creationists:
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* [[Isaac Asimov]] said that all "creationists are stupid, lying people who are not to be trusted in any way." and that all of their "points are equally stupid, except where the creationists are outrightly lying."<ref>Asimov, L., Is Big Brother watching? ''The Humanist'' 44(4):6–10, 1984, quoted by Bergman, 2005</ref>
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* [[Richard Dawkins]] said that anyone rejecting evolution is "ignorant, stupid or insane (or wicked—but I’d rather not consider that)"<ref>Barnes, 2007</ref>
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* Tom Mason, Director of the [[Armagh]] planetarium, links the creationary view to [[Islam]]ic fundamentalism, the [[Inquisition]], and [[Jihad]], and refers to creationism as "ignorance", "irrationality", and "narrow-minded".<ref>Mason, Tom, Science and Fundamentalism, ''Earth Science Ireland'', issue 3, spring 2008 (available online at [http://www.habitas.org.uk/es2k/], then click on "Newletter" link).</ref>
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Creationary [[scientist]]s frequently have their qualifications questioned, blatantly or subtly.
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Patterson (1975) identifies specific historical situations in which the Landmark movement influences the Baptist church. The greatest influence was and is among Baptists of the Old Southwest, largely due to the 50 year editorial ministry of Graves in Nashville and Memphis. Seaboard Baptists were more settled, and thus less susceptible to the controversies which raged along the frontier and the newly settled lands. Landmarkism was responsible for the idea that the local church, not boards, should be responsible for the conduct and administration of missionary activity, which spawned the gospel missions concept. The Landmark theory of Baptist succession was challenged at the end of the last century, creating the Whitsitt Controversy. Landmarkism peaked by 1910, and has nearly faded away,  but its long-term impact is still seen in a resistance to outside influences.<ref>W. Morgan Patterson, "The Influence of Landmarkism among Baptists." ''Baptist History and Heritage'' 1975 10(1): 44-55.</ref>
* On the web-site of the British Centre for Science Education, the article about Creation Ministries International lists CMI's senior staff, but for each scientist listed, puts quote marks around the word "scientist", implying that they are not really scientists.<ref>[http://bcseweb.org.uk/index.php/Main/CreationMinistriesInternational Creation Ministries International] on the BSCE web-site.</ref> Yet each of the scientists listed holds valid qualifications from reputable secular universities.
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== Cases of suppression ==
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==20th century==
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The dominant leader in the early 20th century was [[Edgar Young Mullins]]. He led the SBC between 1899 and 1928 and was successful at mediating theological, political, and organizational conflicts within among Baptists. He was a theologian as well, and synthesized theology and democratic political thought in his writings.<ref>H. Clark Maddux, ''Edgar Young Mullins and Evangelical Developments in the Southern Baptist Convention." ''Baptist History and Heritage'' 1998 33(2): 62-73.</ref>
  
=== Recognition affected ===
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The [[Great Depression]] of the 1930s was a hard blow for most churches, for they were based in impoverished rural areas and money was very scarce. Prosperity returned with World War II, especially with heavy migration to Southern cities (and some western cities like Los Angeles as well), where high paying jobs were plentiful. Affluence came in the 1960s, but meanwhile careful stewards rebuilt the financial base. For example Avery Hamilton Reid, executive secretary of the Alabama Baptist State Convention during 1944-62, resolved the convention's financial crisis. He led fund-raising drives, established the Advance Programs to improve Howard and Judson colleges, built handsome, modern new churches, and increase membership. Reid oversaw the building of a new headquarters for the convention and removed from the convention's budget hospitals taking federal grant money for construction.<ref>George E. Bagley, "Avery Hamilton Reid," ''Alabama Baptist Historian'' 1996 32(1): 9-29. 0002-4147</ref> 
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===Conservatives vs Moderates===
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For most of the 20th century, the factions that became known as "conservatives" and "moderates" were at the fringe of the SBC. That changed when the Civil Rights issue and opposition to [[Jim Crow]] (racial segregation) energized the moderate in the 1950s and 1960s. By the 1970s the conservatives had coalesced. Conservatives believe that moderates were right to support desegregation but that they went too far by accepting changes in changing national social norms, especially regarding abortion, homosexuality and women's roles in society and the ministry.<ref>See Hankins (2002).</ref>
  
Individuals have been denied awards or qualifications, or attempts have been made to have them withdrawn.
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Beginning in the late 1960s, fundamentalists under the leadership of layman Paul Pressler and minister Paige Patterson claimed that the denomination's institutions had come under the influence of liberalism and that a redirection was necessary. Starting in 1979 they mobilized delegates to attend the annual convention and to elect conservative  candidates. Usually winning by ratios of about 55%-45% they elected a series of militantly conservative presidents. In turn the presidents appointed militantly conservative committees and trustees, and systematically transformed the SBC's six seminaries, its  publishing house, its mission boards, and its numerous agencies. Theologically the issue has focused on the inerrancy of Scripture. Some Baptist colleges and universities resisted the trend and broke their ties with the SBC. The moderates protested that the fundamentalists had downplayed the historic emphasis on evangelism to impose a particular reading of Scripture, thereby breaking with the denomination's historic unwillingness to impose creeds.
  
==== David Bolhuis ====
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A revised collection of common principles held by Baptists was set forth by the Southern Baptist Convention in 2000.<ref>see [http://www.sbc.net/bfm/ text]</ref>
  
David Bolhuis, a teacher from Hudsonville, [[Michigan]] was told that the Michigan Science Teachers' Association had unanimously selected him as the High School Teacher of the Year.
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In 2004, conservatives at the SBC introduced a resolution calling on all parents to pull their children out of public schools due to the [[liberal indoctrination]] there.  The resolution was defeated, not because Baptists disagreed with the motivation, but because the SBC did not want to usurp parental authority over how to educate their children.<ref>see [http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=38986 news]</ref>
However, the [[American Civil Liberties Union]] protested, as Bolhuis had been "teaching about" both creation and evolution.
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Subsequent media pressure resulted in the decision to not give Bolhuis the award.<ref>Bergman, 1984, pp.25 & 26.</ref>
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=== Employment affected ===
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===Fighting Sin===
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Religious leaders in the South were theologically conservative, but most denominations supported the [[Social Gospel]]. The Southern Baptists strongly supported some of the main Social Gospel campaigns, especially against liquor and saloons and sexual slavery. The spirit of today's campaigns against abortion very closely resemble the language and rhetoric and organizing techniques of the prohibition campaigns.  The Southern churches were also active opponents of prostitution, obscenity and gambling, and they aligned with like minded politicians like [[Alben Barkley]] of Kentucky (who later became Truman's vice president). Most of the state Baptist conventions had "Christian Life Commissions" that echoed the Social Gospel (they were especially active in Alabama and Virginia).
  
In many cases, individuals have been fired, threatened with being fired, demoted, moved, or not employed.
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Few local SBC ministers considered issues related to the labor movement until 1930-50, long after Northern Protestant denominations had taken pro-union positions. In 1930, ayt the start of the [[Great Depression]], the SBC issued a statement supporting workers' rights, yet focusing on evangelization as a means of spiritual redemption that would offer relief from the problems of industrialization, rather than proposing structural solutions. The convention's 1938 report was largely drafted in response to fears of communism, urging capital and labor to cooperate to safeguard American political order. Steeped in the patriotism accompanying World War II, convention leaders' 1944 statement looked to the principles of democracy and Christian morality as panaceas for tense industrial relations. Amid postwar [[Congress of Industrial Organizations]] (CIO) drives to unionize Southern textile unions—drives that failed—SBC statements from 1946 to 1948 targeted the dangers of consumerism and decried an increasing polarization of unions and management, arguing that individuals must concentrate on the Kingdom of God and not substitute their personal spirituality with secular group solidarity.<ref>H. B. Cavalcanti, "God and Labor in the South: Southern Baptists and The Right to Unionize, 1930-1950." ''Journal of Church and State'' 1998 40(3): 639-660.</ref>
This is not even confined to creationists and intelligent design advocates, but even affects evolutionists who don't toe the line in refusing to even consider alternatives.
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==== Lloyd Dale ====
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===Missionaries===
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In 1888, the Southern Baptist Convention  created the Woman's Missionary Union, which in the early 21st century continued to function as an  umbrella group coordinating the activities of  local groups. The Laymen's Missionary Movement was founded by the Southern Baptist Convention in 1907, quickly followed by state groups such as the Alabama Baptist Laymen in 1908. These brotherhood organizations have championed evangelism, charitable giving, and fraternal brotherhood.
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===Ending segregation===
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Newman (1999) explores the changing attitudes of the Georgia Baptist Convention and Georgia Southern Baptists toward desegregation. He identifies three phases: during 1945-53 the state convention defended segregation and urged equalization of facilities in order to stave off desegregation; during 1954-58 the convention urged Baptists to respond calmly to desegregation
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rulings and to abide by law and order; from 1959 on the convention called for support of the public schools during a period when the state legislature planned to close all the schools if any desegregated. John Jeter Hurt, Jr., and Jack U. Harwell, who successively edited the Baptist weekly magazine ''The Christian Index'' during the 1950s-1960s, exercised a moderate and eventually progressive influence. By 1980 most Georgia Southern Baptists rejected segregation and accepted African Americans in their schools and churches.<ref>Mark Newman, "The Georgia Baptist Convention and Desegregation, 1945-1980." ''Georgia Historical Quarterly'' 1999 83(4): 683-711.</ref> Newman (2001) examines the more hard-line approach of the Louisiana Baptist Convention, the state's largest Protestant denomination and the dominant religious group in the northern part of Louisiana. It endorsed segregation and barred black church membership during 1954-80. Many Southern Baptists were less firmly committed to maintaining segregation than the actions of their convention would suggest. A majority of Baptists, the moderate segregationists, accepted the demise of [[Jim Crow]] and racial segregation in the mid 1960s  as the price of maintaining public school education and because attempts to maintain it conflicted with their commitment to law and order.<ref>Mark Newman, "The Louisiana Baptist Convention and Desegregation, 1954-1980." ''Louisiana History'' 2001 42(4): 389-418.</ref>  By contrast, the Florida Baptist Convention's took a much more moderate stand on racial desegregation of the state's schools from 1954 to 1980. While initially reluctant in accepting the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, W. G. Stracener, editor of the ''Florida Baptist Witness,'' and other leaders of the state convention urged Florida Baptists to oppose efforts to circumvent desegregation because of their "primary commitments to scripture, evangelism, law and order, peace, and public education."<ref>Mark Newman, "The Florida Baptist Convention and Desegregation, 1954-1980." ''Florida Historical Quarterly'' 1999 78(1): 1-22.</ref>
  
Lloyd Dale was an award-winning and highly-qualified high school teacher in South Dakota who was fired in 1980 for teaching about both evolution and creation.<ref>Bergman, 1986, p.61.</ref>
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The SBC's Christian Life Commission, established in 1948, aroused
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controversy when it supported integration during the civil rights movement under the direction of Foy Valentine, and it continues to be a voice of conscience within the SBC under the current head, Richard D. Land, who has led the commission since 1988.  Land has said his idea is, "America in 1955 without the racism and without the sexual discrimination against women."<ref>Quoted in Hankins (2002) pp. 59-60</ref>
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===Women===
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The ordination of women was forbidden between 1845 and 1996.  However women comprised a majority of the membership, and wanted outlets for their piety and energy. Starting in 1907, the Personal Service Department of the Woman's Missionary Union (WMU) has encouraged women to participate in social reform as a form of missionary activity, making explicit the connection to the Social Gospel.<ref>Carol Crawford Holcomb, "The Kingdom at Hand: the Social Gospel and the Personal Service Department of Woman's Missionary Union, Auxiliary to the Southern Baptist Convention." ''Baptist History and Heritage'' 2000 35(2): 49-66.</ref> Flowers (2000) explores the history of the WMU and its emphasis on social reform in the Social Gospel mode from its founding in 1888 to the eve of the Great Depression in 1928. WMU activities reveal a commitment to its historical ideal of service as both material and spiritual.<ref>Betsy Flowers, "Southern Baptist Evangelicals or Social Gospel Liberals? The Woman's Missionary Union and Social Reform, 1888 to 1928." ''American Baptist Quarterly'' 2000 19(2): 106-128.</ref> In the late-20th-century conflict arose between the SBC leadership the WMU. The SBC leaders sought to return the WMU to more traditional evangelistic action, with an emphasis on attacking homosexuality and abortion, and away from the type of broad-gauge social work WMU women had been doing.  In 1995 the SBC terminated a 105-year relationship with the WMU when the WMU decided to affiliate with the breakaway moderate Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and to become more involved in social issues.
  
==== Forrest Mims ====
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The SBC became formally committed to the husband's "headship" in marriage at its convention in 1998, and at the same time ousted "evangelical feminists" from some of its seminaries. In October 1997 a mass rally in Washington, D.C., saw the culmination of the rise of the Promise Keepers, a loosely organized, mixed-faith grouping that campaigned for male leadership and female submission within the family.
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===Politics===
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Early in the 20th century, some leaders, such as Mullins, attempted to forge ties with Northern evangelicals.  The effort collapsed in the 1920s when the "Scopes Monkey Trial" showed an unbridgeable gap between the regions on the issues such as evolution.. Thereafter the SBC stood aloof and avoided any connections with other religious bodies. The lingering influence of Landmarkism, Southern regionalism, and Northern opposition to Southern race relations stood in the way of closer connections. Though its theology had sectarian elements, the SBC dominated white Southern culture into the 1970s. By the 1980s, however, conservatives had taken firm control of the SBC and saw value in allying with Northern evangelicals because both felt threatened by secular humanism and the Left. No longer as dominant in the South, the SBC shared with the neo-evangelicals in "straddling the Christ-and-culture-in-paradox and Christ-and-the-transformer-of-culture positions." Religious alliances were possible because evangelicals North and South had arrived at similar cultural positions, and the SBC membership itself was growing rapidly outside the South by appealing to migrating Southerners and even more to like-minded Northerners.<ref>Barry Hankins, ''Southern Baptists and Northern Evangelicals: Cultural Factors and The Nature Of Religious Alliances". ''Religion and American Culture'' 1997 7(2): 271-298.</ref>
  
[[Forrest Mims]] III is a science writer who, by 1990, had seen more than 500 of his articles published in 62 [[newspaper]]s and [[magazine]]s.
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To form a successful political coalition, SBC leaders had to rethink the relationship of church and state. Hankins (1998) examines the thought of key leaders of the SBC from the 1940s through the mid-1990s who advocated accommodationism - the belief that the government should actively support and promote Christianity. This was a new idea, for the Baptists had long insisted on a sharp separation of church and state. However influential conservatives popularized accommodationism in the SBC since the 1980s.<ref>Barry Hankins, “The Evangelical Accommodationism of Southern Baptist Convention Conservatives." ''Baptist History And Heritage'' 1998 33(1): 54-65.</ref> Politically most  Southern Baptist leaders had shown little interest in partisan politics before about 1980, when [[Ronald Reagan]] encouraged prominent ministers to form a political coalition with the [[Republican Party]] based on moral issues, including opposition to abortion and support for school prayer.  Many GOP leaders have joined SBC churches (including [[Newt Gingrich]] and [[John McCain]], but the first insider to show wide political appeal was [[Mike Huckabee]] in 2008.<ref>Oran P. Smith, ''The Rise of Baptist Republicanism'' (1997)</ref>
  
Science magazine ''[[Scientific American]]'' invited him to submit some articles for their ''Amateur Scientist'' column, and the expectation was that these would lead on to a permanent job.
 
  
The articles were published in 1990, and the editor described Mims' work as "first rate", but when he discovered that Mims was a creationist, Mims was denied further work with the magazine.<ref>Anon., 1991.</ref><ref>Anon., 1997?</ref>
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Although Southern whites began voting Republican in presidential elections in the 1960s, they considered themselves Democrats and voted for state and local Democrats for many more years.  The table shows that SBC pastors were only 27% Republican in the 1970s; they then moved into the GOP, followed by their parishioners a few years later. By 2004 all elements of the SBC were heavily Republican in orientation. The GOP identification slipped a little in 2008, but about 80% of the Southern Baptists voted for McCain over Barack Obama.
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<TABLE BORDER>
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<TR> <TD>
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      White Southern Protestants: Party Identification:      percent Republican </TD>
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<TR> <TD></TD> <TD>
 +
      &#160;1972-1980</TD><TD>
 +
      &#160;1982-1990</TD><TD>
 +
      &#160;1992-2000</TD><TD>
 +
      &#160;&#160;2004  &#160;&#160;</TD><TD>
 +
      &#160;&#160;Gain  &#160;&#160;</TD> </TR>
 +
<TR> <TD>
 +
      All</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.32">
 +
      32%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.39">
 +
      39%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.5">
 +
      50%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.58">
 +
      58%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,+E4-B4">
 +
      &#160;+26%</TD> </TR>
 +
<TR> <TD>
 +
      SBC members</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.27">
 +
      27%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.38">
 +
      38%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.46">
 +
      46%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.65">
 +
      65%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,+E5-B5">
 +
      &#160;+38%</TD> </TR>
 +
<TR> <TD>
 +
      SBC pastors</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.27">
 +
      27%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.66">
 +
      66%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.77">
 +
      77%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.81">
 +
      81%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,+E6-B6">
 +
      &#160;+54%</TD> </TR>
 +
<TR> <TD>
 +
      other evangelicals</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.28">
 +
      28%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.37">
 +
      37%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.52">
 +
      52%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,0.61">
 +
      61%</TD><TD QP::NUMFORMAT:="288,-1,+E7-B7">
 +
      &#160;+33%</TD> </TR>
 +
</TABLE>
 +
Table shows % who consider themselves Republican; others are Democrats and Independents.<br>
 +
Source: Lyman A. Kellstedt et al., "The Soul of the South: Religion and Southern Politics in the Twenty-first Century" in Charles S. Bullock III and Mark J. Rozell, eds. ''The New Politics of the Old South'' (2007) p.&nbsp;316
 +
<HR>
 +
==See also==
 +
* [[Baptists]]
 +
* [[J. D. Grey]]
  
==== Richard Sternberg ====
+
==Bibliography==
{{main|Smithsonian-Sternberg affair}}
+
==== Secondary sources ====
 +
* Basden, Paul, ed. ''Has Our Theology Changed? Southern Baptist Thought since 1845.'' (1994). 344 pp.
 +
* Baker, Robert. ''The Southern Baptist Convention and Its People, 1607–1972.'' Broadman Press, 1974.
 +
* Barnes, William. ''The Southern Baptist Convention, 1845–1953'' Broadman Press, 1954.
 +
* Eighmy, John. ''Churches in Cultural Captivity: A History of the Social Attitudes of Southern Baptists.'' University of Tennessee Press, 1972.
 +
* ''Encyclopedia of Southern Baptists: Presenting Their History, Doctrine, Polity, Life, Leadership, Organization & Work'' Knoxville: Broadman Press, v 1–2 (1958), 1500 pp; 2 supplementary volumes 1958 and 1962; vol 5 = Index, 1984
 +
* Fuller, A. James. ''Chaplain to the Confederacy: Basil Manly and Baptist Life in the Old South'' (2002)
 +
* Gatewood, Willard. ''Controversy in the 1920s: Fundamentalism, Modernism, and Evolution.'' Vanderbilt University Press, 1969.
 +
*  Harper, Keith.  "Old Landmarkism: a Historiographical Appraisal." ''Baptist History and Heritage'' 1990 25(2): 31-40, reviews the scholarly studies
 +
* Harvey, Paul. ''Redeeming the South: Religious Cultures and Racial Identities among Southern Baptists, 1865–1925.'' (1997) [http://www.questia.com/read/35415633?title=Redeeming%20the%20South%3a%20Religious%20Cultures%20and%20Racial%20Identities%20among%20Southern%20Baptists%2c%201865-1925 online edition]
 +
* Heyrman, Christine Leigh. ''Southern Cross: The Beginnings of the Bible Belt'' (1998) 1770–1860
 +
* Hill, Samuel, et al. ''Encyclopedia of Religion in the South'' (2005), comprehensive coverage
 +
* Leonard, Bill J. ''Baptist Ways: A History'' (2003), comprehensive international history
 +
* Leonard, Bill J. ''Baptists in America.'' (2005), general survey and history by leading Southern Baptist
 +
* Leonard, Bill J. "Independent Baptists: from Sectarian Minority to 'Moral Majority'". ''Church History''. Volume: 56. Issue: 4. 1987. pp 504+. [http://www.questia.com/read/95146834?title=Independent%20Baptists%3a%20from%20Sectarian%20Minority%20to%20%22Moral%20Majority%22 online edition]
 +
* Lindman, Janet Moore. ''Bodies of Belief: Baptist Community in Early America'' (2008)
 +
* Lumpkin, William L. ''Baptist History in the South: Tracing through the Separates the Influence of the Great Awakening, 1754–1787'' (1995)
 +
* Marsden, George. ''Fundamentalism and American Culture: The Shaping of 20th Century Evangelicalism.'' Oxford University Press, 1980. the major scholarly history of the movement
 +
* Morgan, David T. ''Southern Baptist Sisters: In Search of Status, 1845–2000.'' (2003)
 +
* Patterson, W. Morgan. "Baptist Growth in America: Evaluation of Trends." ''Baptist History and Heritage'' 1979 14(1): 16-26.
 +
* Scales, T. Laine. ''All That Fits a Woman: Training Southern Baptist Women for Charity and Mission, 1907–1926'' Mercer U. Press 2002
 +
* Shurden, Walter B. and Lori Redwine Varnadoe. "The Origins of the Southern Baptist Convention: a Historiographical Study." ''Baptist History and Heritage'' 2002 37(1): 71-96. How 12 church historians have interpreted the organization's 1845 founding. Although early historians ignored the importance of the issue of slavery, gradually historians began to realize the xcentrality of the issue in the group's founding.
 +
* Spain, Rufus B.'' At Ease in Zion: A Social History of Southern Baptists, 1865–1900'' (1961)
 +
* Sutton, Jerry. ''The Baptist Reformation: The Conservative Resurgence in the Southern Baptist Convention'' (2000).
 +
* Tull, James E. "The Landmark Movement: an Historical and Theological Appraisal." ''Baptist History and Heritage'' 1975 10(1): 3-18. [http://www.jstor.org/stable/3163329 in JSTOR]
 +
* Tull, James E., and Morris Ashcraft. ''High Church Baptists in the South: The Origin, Nature, and Influence of Landmarkism'' (2000) 182pp
 +
** Tull, James E. "A Study of Southern Baptist Landmarkism in the Light of Historical Baptist Ecclesiology," ''Church History,'' Vol. 31, No. 3 (Sep., 1962), pp.&nbsp;359–360, short summary
 +
* Wills, Gregory A.'' Democratic Religion: Freedom, Authority, and Church Discipline in the Baptist South, 1785–1900.'' (1997) [http://www.questia.com/read/55113490?title=Democratic%20Religion%3a%20Freedom%2c%20Authority%2c%20and%20Church%20Discipline%20in%20the%20Baptist%20South%2c%201785-1900 online edition]
 +
* Yarnell III, Malcolm B. ''The Formation of Christian Doctrine'' (2007), on Baptist theology
 +
===Since 1960s===
 +
* Ammerman, Nancy, ''Baptist Battles: Social Change and Religious Conflict in the Southern Baptist Convention.'' Rutgers University Press, 1990.
 +
* Ammerman, Nancy, ed. ''Southern Baptists Observed'' University of Tennessee Press, 1993.
 +
* Farnsley II, Arthur Emery, ''Southern Baptist Politics: Authority and Power in the Restructuring of an American Denomination'' (1994) [http://www.questia.com/read/98516612?title=Southern%20Baptist%20Politics%3a%20Authority%20and%20Power%20in%20the%20Restructuring%20of%20an%20American%20Denomination online edition]
 +
* Hankins, Barry. ''Uneasy in Babylon: Southern Baptist Conservatives and American Culture.'' (2002) 344 pp Argues that Baptist conservatives see themselves as cultural warriors critiquing a secular and liberal America
 +
* Kell, Carl L. and L. Raymond Camp, ''In the Name of the Father: The Rhetoric of the New Southern Baptist Convention.'' (1999) [http://www.questia.com/read/105268786?title=In%20the%20Name%20of%20the%20Father%3a%20%20The%20Rhetoric%20of%20the%20New%20Southern%20Baptist%20Convention online edition]
 +
* Leonard, Bill J. ''God's Last and Only Hope: The Fragmentation of the Southern Baptist Convention.'' Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1990.
 +
* Morgan, David T. ''The New Crusades, the New Holy Land: Conflict in the Southern Baptist Convention, 1969-1991.'' (1996). 246 pp.
 +
* Rosenberg, Ellen. ''The Southern Baptists: A Subculture in Transition.'' University of Tennessee Press, 1989.
 +
* Smith, Oran P. ''The Rise of Baptist Republicanism'' (1997), on recent voting behavior
  
==== Guillermo Gonzalez ====
+
===State and regional studies===
Guillermo Gonzalez was denied [[tenure]] and promotion to associate professor by [[Iowa State University]], despite apparently easily meeting their criteria.
+
* McBeth, Harry Leon. ''Texas Baptists: A Sesquicentennial History'' (1998)
The university's stated criteria for promotion to associate professor says that "For promotion to associate professor, excellence sufficient to lead to a national or international reputation is required and would ordinarily be shown by the publication of approximately fifteen papers of good quality in refereed journals".
+
* Williams, C. Fred, S. Ray Granade, and Kenneth M. Startup. ''A System and Plan: Arkansas Baptist State Convention, 1848-1998'' (1998)
Gonzalez exceeded this by 350%, with 68 such papers, including papers that had surprisingly high numbers of citations.
+
* Flynt, Wayne. ''Alabama Baptists in the Heart of Dixie'' (1998)
 +
* Wardin, Jr., Albert W.  ''Tennessee Baptists: A Comprehensive History, 1779-1999'' (1999).
  
But Gonzales co-authored a book in 2004 which revealed his support for intelligent design, and two of his colleagues have admitted that his views on intelligent design were a factor in denying Gonzalez tenure.<ref>Grigg, 2007</ref><ref>Klinghoffer, 2007</ref>
+
==== Primary sources ====
  
==== Robert Gentry ====
+
* Baker, Robert. ed. ''A Baptist Source Book.'' Broadman Press, 1966.
 
+
* Glenmary Research Center. ''Religious Congregations & Membership in the United States'' 2000.  
Robert Gentry became the acknowledged expert on [[radiohalos]], and published papers in a number of leading scientific journals, including ''Science'', ''Nature'', and ''Journal of Geophysical Research''. However, when his creationist views became known, his contract with Oak Ridge National Laboratories was cancelled.<ref>Gentry, 186, p.191</ref><ref>Buckna</ref>
+
* Kell, Carl L., ed. ''Exiled: Voices of the Southern Baptist Convention Holy War.'' (2006) 228pp
 
+
* McBeth, H. Leon, (ed.) ''A Sourcebook for Baptist Heritage'' (1990), primary sources for Baptist history.
==== Roger Paull ====
+
* McGlothlin, W. J. (ed.) ''Baptist Confessions of Faith.'' Philadelphia: The American Baptist Publication Society, 1911.
Roger Paull was a substitute [[teacher]] in Arizona.  One assignment saw him showing to his class a video left by the regular teacher.
+
* Shurden, Walter B. and Randy Shepley, eds. ''Going for the Jugular: A Documentary History of the SBC Holy War.'' [Mercer U. Press, 1996. 281 pp.
The video disparaged [[Christianity]] and glorified [[naturalism]].
+
==External links==
After the third video, on [[theory of evolution|evolution]], he briefly mentioned [[intelligent design]] to the class.
+
* [http://www.baptisthistory.org/ Baptist History and Heritage Society]
The next day he was suspended and has not been able to teach since, having been effectively "blackballed".
+
* [http://www.abpnews.com/ Associated Baptist Press] - An Independent Baptist news agency
He says that he was viewed "almost the same way a potential pedophile would be".
+
* [http://www.bpnews.net/ Baptist Press] - A Southern Baptist news agency
<ref>Paull, 2007</ref>
+
* [http://www.sbc.net/default.asp SBC Website]
 
+
====Notes====
==== Michael Reiss ====
+
<references/>
Rev. Professor Michael Reiss, an evolutionist, called for schools to teach students ''about'' creationism,<ref>Simpson and Gray, 2008; Halloway, 2008(b)</ref> and this resulted in him being forced to resign from his part time job as Director of Education at the [[Royal Society]].<ref>Beckford, 2008; Halloway, 2008(b).</ref>
+
[[Category:Christian Denominations]]
 
+
[[Category:United States History]]
=== Accreditation affected ===
+
[[Category:Theologians]]
==== The ICR Graduate School ====
+
[[Category:Fundamentalism]]
{{main|ICR Graduate School#Controversies{{!}}ICR Graduate School}}
+
[[Category:Baptists]]
 
+
[[Category:Revivals]]
The [[ICR Graduate School]] had for years been offering graduate degrees in [[California]]. Then in 1986 California abruptly changed its rules, and its new Superintendent of Public Instruction, [[William Honig]], determined to stop ICR at any cost. ICR had to sue the State in federal court to get his decisions reversed.
+
 
+
In 2006 ICR decided to move to [[Texas]] but then encountered the same difficulties. In April 2008 the Academic Excellence and Research Committee of the Texas Higher-Education Coordinating Board voted unanimously to deny the ICR Graduate School's application for accreditation. The Texas Commissioner of Higher Education said only, "Religious beliefs are not science." ICR might appeal the process administratively, submit a new proposal, or sue the State of Texas for injunctive relief.
+
 
+
=== Court challenges to education ===
+
 
+
In 1925 the [[American Civil Liberties Union]] challenged a [[Tennessee]] law that forbade teaching that man had evolved (it didn't otherwise forbid teaching evolution), in what became known as the [[Scopes Trial]].
+
The ACLU lawyer, [[Clarence Darrow]], argued that it was wrong to only teach one view of origins.<ref>[http://new.jesuscreated.org/index.html Jesus Created Ministries, Home page].</ref>
+
 
+
Yet now the ACLU and other supporters of evolution argue that only the evolutionary view of origins should be taught.
+
 
+
==== Dover County School Board ====
+
 
+
{{main|Kitzmiller vs. Dover Area School District}}
+
 
+
In 2004, the Dover County School Board in Pennsylvania, U.S.A., approved a curriculum which included that teachers should read to their class a statement pointing out that evolution is an explanation of observations, not a fact, that intelligent design is an alternative explanation, that the book ''Of Pandas and People'' is available if students want to know more about Intelligent design, and that the students are to keep an open mind.
+
 
+
But even this was too much for the committed evolutionists, and a court challenge, backed by the [[American Civil Liberties Union]], saw the requirement removed, on the grounds that the proponents of the requirement had religious motives.
+
 
+
==== Philip Bishop ====
+
 
+
Associate professor of physiology, Dr. Philip Bishop, was taken to court by his employer, the [[University of Alabama]], to stop him briefly expressing his views favouring [[intelligent design]], on the grounds that they were religious.
+
Yet views ''opposing'' religion are routinely expressed in classes with no attempts made to stop them.<ref>Bergman, 2004</ref>
+
 
+
==== Cobb County School District ====
+
 
+
{{main|Selman v. Cobb County School District}}
+
 
+
Even pointing out that students should apply some critical thinking to evolution is unacceptable to the evolutionists.
+
 
+
In 2002 the Cobb County School District in [[Georgia]], U.S.A., placed stickers in the front of biology textbooks which simply read:
+
{{QuoteBox|This textbook contains material on evolution.  Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things.  This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered.}}
+
Yet even this innocuous statement was challenged in court, with the ultimate result being that the stickers were removed from the textbooks.
+
 
+
=== Peer review publications ===
+
 
+
A frequent criticism of creationism and intelligent design is that they fail to pass [[peer review]], and cannot therefore be considered scientific.
+
 
+
Creationists and intelligent design proponents counter that they fail to pass peer review on the grounds of ideology, not scientific merit.
+
 
+
One columnist wrote:{{QuoteBox|Note the circularity: Critics of ID have long argued that the theory was unscientific because it had not been put forward in a peer-reviewed scientific journal. Now that it has, they argue that it shouldn't have been because it's unscientific.<ref>Klinghoffer, 2005</ref>}}
+
 
+
==== ''Chemistry in Australia'' ====
+
 
+
The April 2007 issue of ''Chemistry in Australia'' included an article titled "creationist’s view of the intelligent design debate", written by John Ashton, chemist and Fellow of the Royal Australian Chemical Institute (RACI), publishers of the journal.
+
 
+
The outcry against the article by evolutionists, which included effectively calling Ashton a liar, sweepings dismissals of creationism, but little if anything in the way of actual rebuttal, resulted in the RACI removing mention of the article from their web-site.<ref>Walker, 2007</ref>
+
 
+
==== ''Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington'' ====
+
 
+
In August 2004<ref>Meyer, 2004. The on-line archives of the magazine list it as June 2004 [http://apt.allenpress.com/perlserv/?request=get-toc&issn=0006-324X&volume=117&issue=2], but this is not considered reliable, as the same source lists both of the following two issues as being December 2004.</ref> the ''Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington'' published a paper by [[Stephen Meyer]]<ref>Meyer, 2004</ref> which gave an overview of intelligent design arguments.
+
 
+
The ensuing outcry, including from people who had not even read the paper, resulted in the [[Biological Society of Washington]] undertaking to never again publish anything about intelligent design.
+
 
+
There were claims that the paper had bypassed the peer review process, but these were shown to be false.<ref>McVay, 2005</ref>
+
The refusal to ever publish on the topic again was not on the grounds of not passing peer review, but in line with the [[American Association for the Advancement of Science]]'s position that intelligent design is not science.<ref>Sternberg; Walker, 2007; Klinghoffer, 1995a</ref><ref>[http://www.biolsocwash.org/id_statement.html Statement from the Council of the Biological Society of Washington]</ref>
+
 
+
==== ''Science'' letters to the editor ====
+
 
+
After failing to get a letter published in the journal ''[[Science (journal)|Science]]'', [[Russell Humphreys]] wrote to the letters editor asking if the journal had a policy of suppressing creationist letters.
+
She replied that "It is true that we are not likely to publish letters supporting creationism".
+
This was despite the journal's policy of publishing letters to include "the presentation of minority or conflicting points of view".<ref>Gentry, 1986, p.199-194.</ref>
+
=== Public information ===
+
 
+
==== The Science Show, ABC Australia ====
+
 
+
In a March 2003 broadcast of ''The Science Show'' on Radio National, a radio station of the [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation]], presenter Robyn Williams and [[Eugenie Scott]], executive director of the American [[National Center for Science Education]], openly admitted, on the pretence that evolution is true, that creationists do not warrant equal time.
+
{{QuoteBox|'''Robyn Williams:''' And the old question of science having two sides - and this is a journalistic thing where some of us still, especially if you go to television, are supposed to display conflict, you know, one side and the other side as if there is this continuing argument.<br /><br />'''Eugenie Scott:''' Well Robyn, you put your finger exactly on the issue. When there is a controversy, responsible journalists will present both or all sides and give a fair opportunity for all sides to be heard. If you were doing a show on anthrax you would not feel compelled to put a Christian scientist<ref>This is according to the official transcript.  The audio sounded more like this being a reference to Christian Science than Christian scientists.  The [[Christian Science]] cult, unlike Christian scientists, denies the germ theory of disease.</ref> who denied the germ theory of disease on the show to balance the program, because the germ theory of disease in medicine is a done deal, we are not debating whether germs cause disease. Similarly, if you are discussing an issue like what topics should be taught in science education at the pre-college level, which is a continuing controversy in the United States, you don't debate whether to teach evolution, because evolution is state of the art science and it should be taught. You don't debate whether to teach evidence against evolution or some sort of creationism because scientists don't accept these arguments, there is no body of evidence against evolution. And this is what the theory of biological evolution is all about.<ref>Williams, 2003</ref>}}
+
 
+
==== Giant's Causeway Visitor Centre ====
+
 
+
When creationists proposed<ref>The Causeway Creation Committee, [http://www.causewaycreation.com/Objectives.html Objectives]</ref><ref>Heneghan, Tom, [http://blogs.reuters.com/faithworld/2007/11/30/creationists-claim-the-giants-causeway/ Creationists claim the Giant’s Causeway], Reuters Blogs, 30th November, 2007.</ref> that a new visitor's centre at the [[Giant's Causeway]] geological formation in [[Northern Ireland]] should include the creationist explanation of its formation<ref>Walker, Tas., [http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/2016 A giant cause], ''Creation'' 27(2):28–34, March 2005.</ref> alongside the secular view, anti-creationists objected, wanting only their view to be made available to visitors.<ref>Zalasiewicz, Jan, and Bazley, Tony, [http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/page3473_en.html Giant's Causeway - myth and reality], ''Geoscientist'' 18.4, April 2008.</ref><ref>Walker, Tasman, [http://creationontheweb.com/content/view/5729 Call to censor public information at the Giant’s Causeway, UK] 3rd May, 2008 (Creation Ministries International).</ref>
+
 
+
== Attempts to prevent creationists being heard ==
+
 
+
On numerous occasions, anti-creationists have attempted to prevent creationists being able to promote their point of view by attempting to have their venue bookings cancelled or by heckling the speakers during their talks.
+
 
+
=== Werner Gitt ===
+
 
+
In October 2008, protesters attempted to prevent German creationary scientist Dr. [[Werner Gitt]] from giving a talk titled ''Why I as a scientist believe the Bible'' at Leibniz University.
+
The protests followed unsuccessful attempts to pressure the university administration to cancel the talk.
+
As the talk was about to start, the protesters unfurled banners, one with the German for "Creationists, go to hell!" and another with a foul expression, then started chanting and blowing whistles to prevent the talk from going ahead.
+
Police were called by the organisers, but the two, then five, officers were ignored by the protesters, who were only removed after another 20 police officers arrived, allowing the talk to go ahead an hour late.<ref>Wieland, 2008</ref>
+
 
+
== Bibliography ==
+
* Anon., [http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/1248/ Scientific American refuses to hire creationist], ''Creation'' 13(2):16–17, March 1991.
+
* Anon., [http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/3470/ Revolutionary Atmospheric Invention by Victim of Anti-creationist Discrimination], 1997? <!-- date based on most recent references in article. --> (Creation Ministries International).
+
* Barnes, Peter, [http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/5405/ The early chapters of Genesis and evolution], 13th November, 2007 (Creation Ministries International)
+
* Beckford, Martin, [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/religion/2971456/Royal-Society-scientist-loses-post-in-row-over-creationism-in-schools.html Royal Society scientist loses post in row over creationism in schools] ''Telegraph'', 16th September, 2008.</ref>
+
* Bergman, Jerry, The Criterion, Onesimus, Richfield Minnesota, 1984, ISBN 0-932903-01-0.
+
* Bergman, Jerry, [http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/1784/ Contemporary suppression of the theistic worldview], ''Journal of Creation'' 9(2):267–275, August 1995.
+
* Bergman, Jerry, [http://www.icr.org/index.php?module=articles&action=view&ID=97 A Story of Two Professors] ''Impact'' 372, 1st June, 2004.
+
* Buckna, David, [http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/3486/ Do Creationists Publish in Notable Refereed Journals?] (Creation Ministries International).
+
* Gentry, Robert V., Creation's Tiny Mystery, Earth Science Associates, Knoxville Tennessee, 1986, ISBN 0-9616753-1-4.
+
* Grigg, Russell, [http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/5126/ Darwinian thought police strike again], 12th June 2007 (Creation Ministries International).
+
* Halloway, Andrew, [http://creationontheweb.com/content/view/5626 Expelled: New movie exposes persecution of anti-Darwinists], 15th February, 2008 (Creation Ministries International).
+
* Halloway, Andrew, [http://creationontheweb.com/content/view/6047/ Reiss resigns as Royal Society stifles debate on evolution], 23rd September, 2008 (Creation Ministries International).
+
* Klinghoffer, David, [http://www.opinionjournal.com/taste/?id=110006220 The Branding of a Heretic], ''Opinion Journal'', 28th January, 2005.
+
* Klinghoffer, David, [http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/klinghoffer200508160826.asp Unintelligent Design] National Review Online, 16th August, 2005.
+
* Klinghoffer, David, [http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/013/733rlosv.asp Tenure Trouble], The Weekly Standard, 6th August, 2007.
+
* McVay, James, [http://www.rsternberg.net/OSC_ltr.htm Office of Special Counsel "Pre-Closure Letter"], 5th August, 2005.
+
* Paull, Roger, [http://creationontheweb.com/content/view/5788 Censoring intelligent design], 27th May, 2008 (Creation Ministries International).
+
* Sheppard, Pam, [http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/3593/ The Smithsonian/Sternberg controversy], 22nd August, 2005 (Creation Ministries International).
+
* Simpson, Aislinn, and Gray, Richard, [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/education/2798162/Creationism-should-be-taught-in-science-classes-says-expert.html Creationism should be taught in science classes, says expert] ''Telegraph'', 12th September, 2008.
+
* Sternberg, Richard, [http://www.rsternberg.net/ Richard Sternberg's home page]
+
* Walker, Tas., [http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/5053/ Chemists in stew about intelligent design], 24th April, 2007 (Creation Ministries International).
+
* Wieland, Carl, [http://creationontheweb.com/content/view/6182 ‘Go to hell, creationists!’], 30th December, 2008 (Creation Ministries International).
+
* Williams, Robyn, [http://www.abc.net.au/rn/scienceshow/stories/2003/798387.htm The Steve Project] The Science Show, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, broadcast 8th March, 2003.
+
 
+
== Notes ==
+
{{Reflist|2}}
+
 
+
[[Category:Creationism]]
+
[[Category:Evolution]]
+

Revision as of 19:32, July 13, 2016

The Southern Baptist Convention or SBC is the largest organization of Baptists. It has over 16 million members in 42,000 churches across America, with greatest strength in the South.[1] It also sponsors 10,000 missionaries in 157 countries. It holds 41 state conventions and one national convention annually, and in recent years it tends to identify with conservative Christian values and supports Biblical inerrancy. Insistence on baptism by immersion, as it is presented in the Bible, fulfills the twin symbolism of washing from sin and of death and rebirth, as well as pointing to the Baptists' conviction that Scripture is the complete and sufficient basis of the Christian faith.

Leonard (2000) explores the bitter internal divisions within the SBC since 1979. Conflict between fundamentalist and moderate factions at the national level has continued to impact state conventions, Baptist associations, and local congregations. Important recent changes include the establishment of relationships with Independent Baptists and other ethnic and racial groups, the emergence of mega-churches with very powerful ministers and multi-million-dollar budgets, the reorganization of stewardship programs, and the founding of new theological schools.[2]

Southern Baptists are facing a membership decline that could shrink the nation's largest Protestant denomination by nearly half in 40 years, its convention president Rev. Johnny Hunt, warned in June 2009.[3]

History

American Baptists emerged in the 18th century with bases in Rhode Island, Virginia and Pennsylvania. Influenced by the First Great Awakening they adopted revivals. By 1800-1830 they were major participants in the Second Great Awakening. Most historians view these evangelicals as radicals who were on society's fringe during the colonial period, only to become conservative by the nineteenth century after they had achieved social acceptance.[4]

Growth

The denomination grew very rapidly throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, becoming the largest Protestant denomination in the U.S. by the 1870s. After 1945 it began to expand outside the South, first to the western states then to the north. Patterson (1979) attributes the growth of Southern Baptists since the 18th century, apart from sociological, demographic, and cultural influences, to religious factors: 1) heritage of the revival emphasis, 2) denominational pride growing out of Landmark exclusiveness, 3) development of efficient and adaptable denominational organizations, 4) sense of denominational loyalty, 5) massive program of tuition-free theological education, 6) dispersion of Southern Baptists across the United States, and 7) a gift for organizing and promoting programs and methods to share the gospel in a more effective way.

1955

By 1955 the SBC counted 8,200,000 members, and were baptising an average 1,000 new members a day. The 30,000 affiliated churches reached 24 states, but were still heavily concentrated in the South. Local churches were worth $1.2 billion, up from $276 million in 1945. Yearly contributions reached $305 million. Sunday school membership was 6,400,000. The denomination supported 30 colleges and universities, 22 junior colleges, six seminaries, eight academies and four Bible schools. Most were still small and the total enrollment was only 50,080. They ran 33 hospitals and 23 magazines.[5]

Theology

Baptist theology has slowly changed since the formation of the SBC in 1845, but at no time was there ever a monolithic set of Baptist beliefs. Baptist theology has the primary goal of being faithful to the Bible, and it has been influenced by many trends in theology and general American culture. Race relations, for example, affected Baptist theology. Southern Baptist theology has been part of historic Christian orthodoxy, yet it has exhibited diversity on some issues, including Calvinism-Arminianism, conservatism-progressivism, and the millennium. In the theological conflicts of the 1980s and 1990s both sides have claimed historical foundations for their positions. Early Baptist theologians like James Boyce were heavily influenced by Princeton theologians and their theories of biblical inerrancy. In the twentieth century leaders like E. Y. Mullins did not speak of inerrancy but tended to emphasize the infallibility of the Bible's religious message.[6]

Calvinist themes of predestination faded away as revivalism pushed Baptists in an Arminian direction. Anti-Catholicism—a powerful force in the 1920s—faded away after the election of John F. Kennedy in 1960 ended fears of a Vatican takeover of the U.S., and the emergence of the abortion issue in the 1970s saw prominent Baptists form an informal political alliance with the Catholic bishops. There have also been changes in the theology of such topics as the Bible, predestination, the atonement, perseverance and apostasy, the Christian life, the church, church leaders, the priesthood of all believers, the millennium, philosophy of religion, Christian ethics, and religious liberty. On the other hand, there had been little or no change regarding God, the Trinity, Jesus Christ, sin, and the ordinances.[7]

Landmarkism

Wamble (1964) surveys the Landmark theology which emerged in Tennessee in the 1850s, was quite strong by 1900, and can still be found among Baptists, even though the organized Landmarker (or "Landmarkean") movement has largely disappeared. Landmarkism insists upon Baptist exclusivism because (1) only Baptist ministers are authentic gospel ministers. (2) Only baptism by immersion, authorized by an authentic minister, upon an authentic candidate (believer), as a symbol (not means) of salvation, is true baptism. (3) The church is a visible, local and independent congregation, exercising plenary authority in a democratic manner, and only Baptist churches fit this description. (4) Baptist churches –unlike all other churches—have an unbroken succession since the time of Christ.[8] Landmarkers refuse to recognize the legitimacy of other denominations, or the validity of their baptisms. By 1859 the movement failed to take control of the Southern Baptist Convention, and always remained a minority viewpoint.

J. R. Graves, a Baptist pastor in Nashville, Tennessee, during the 1840s-1860s, became the leader of the Landmark movement among Baptists, asserting that Southern Baptists alone possessed the true version of Christianity.[9] James Madison Pendleton (1811-1891) was one of the "Great Triumvirate" of the Landmark Movement. Not as intensely doctrinaire as James R. Graves or Amos Cooper Dayton, he accepted the concept of the universal church, never adhered to the theory of Baptist successionism, and was able and willing to work within the framework of Baptist conventions and societies in a way that many Landmarkists were unable to do. He named the movement with his book, An Old Landmark Reset (1854). His basic contribution to the Landmark movement lay in his refusal to accept non-immersionists (non-Baptists) as gospel ministers. Although born in the South, he favored the gradual emancipation of slaves, a position which finally forced him out of his pastorate in Tennessee during the Civil War. He subsequently moved to Ohio and later to Pennsylvania. He wrote numerous works, two of which have significantly influenced American Baptist practice and thought until recent days: Church Manual (1867) and Christian Doctrines: A Compendium of Theology (1878).[10] Amos Cooper Dayton (1813-1865) was the most prolific Landmarkean writer, and indeed was the first Baptist in the South to write a religious novel, Theodosia Ernest (1857). It covered baptism and church polity. Seeking to disseminate Baptist doctrine through the medium of fiction, he defined the church in one of his novels as a "local" group, organized independently of Christian people - a definition of the church which became a major cornerstone of Landmarkism. Beginning as a Presbyterian, he became a Baptist in 1852, and launched his literary career the following year. He authored 13 volumes of fiction and theology and contributed nearly 1,000 articles to 20 different religious periodicals.[11]

In 1898 a major controversy arose when Baptist church historian Dr. William Heth Whitsitt challenged the Landmarkean belief that, from St. Peter to contemporary times, an unbroken chain of churches practiced immersion in the baptismal rite and thereby established themselves as part of the "one, true church." Texas Baptists, led by Benajah Harvey Carroll, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Waco, organized the Landmarkeans to reject Whitsitt's findings.

The central idea of Landmarkism is the authority of the local congregation in Baptist ecclesiology. Landmarkism can be viewed as a doctrinal aberration from the English and early American Baptist theology and polity. Tull (1975) traces the movement from its 1851 beginning in Cotton Grove, Tennessee to its present small remnant. In its full intensity Landmarkism was sectarian in its emphasis on the role of the local church, its denial of the validity of "alien" immersion, an adherence to strict, local church communion, and a hostile response to the ecumenical movement - all of which, Tull concludes, are quite foreign to the ecclesiological traditions which had been developed by English and American Baptists in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Patterson (1975) identifies specific historical situations in which the Landmark movement influences the Baptist church. The greatest influence was and is among Baptists of the Old Southwest, largely due to the 50 year editorial ministry of Graves in Nashville and Memphis. Seaboard Baptists were more settled, and thus less susceptible to the controversies which raged along the frontier and the newly settled lands. Landmarkism was responsible for the idea that the local church, not boards, should be responsible for the conduct and administration of missionary activity, which spawned the gospel missions concept. The Landmark theory of Baptist succession was challenged at the end of the last century, creating the Whitsitt Controversy. Landmarkism peaked by 1910, and has nearly faded away, but its long-term impact is still seen in a resistance to outside influences.[12]

20th century

The dominant leader in the early 20th century was Edgar Young Mullins. He led the SBC between 1899 and 1928 and was successful at mediating theological, political, and organizational conflicts within among Baptists. He was a theologian as well, and synthesized theology and democratic political thought in his writings.[13]

The Great Depression of the 1930s was a hard blow for most churches, for they were based in impoverished rural areas and money was very scarce. Prosperity returned with World War II, especially with heavy migration to Southern cities (and some western cities like Los Angeles as well), where high paying jobs were plentiful. Affluence came in the 1960s, but meanwhile careful stewards rebuilt the financial base. For example Avery Hamilton Reid, executive secretary of the Alabama Baptist State Convention during 1944-62, resolved the convention's financial crisis. He led fund-raising drives, established the Advance Programs to improve Howard and Judson colleges, built handsome, modern new churches, and increase membership. Reid oversaw the building of a new headquarters for the convention and removed from the convention's budget hospitals taking federal grant money for construction.[14]

Conservatives vs Moderates

For most of the 20th century, the factions that became known as "conservatives" and "moderates" were at the fringe of the SBC. That changed when the Civil Rights issue and opposition to Jim Crow (racial segregation) energized the moderate in the 1950s and 1960s. By the 1970s the conservatives had coalesced. Conservatives believe that moderates were right to support desegregation but that they went too far by accepting changes in changing national social norms, especially regarding abortion, homosexuality and women's roles in society and the ministry.[15]

Beginning in the late 1960s, fundamentalists under the leadership of layman Paul Pressler and minister Paige Patterson claimed that the denomination's institutions had come under the influence of liberalism and that a redirection was necessary. Starting in 1979 they mobilized delegates to attend the annual convention and to elect conservative candidates. Usually winning by ratios of about 55%-45% they elected a series of militantly conservative presidents. In turn the presidents appointed militantly conservative committees and trustees, and systematically transformed the SBC's six seminaries, its publishing house, its mission boards, and its numerous agencies. Theologically the issue has focused on the inerrancy of Scripture. Some Baptist colleges and universities resisted the trend and broke their ties with the SBC. The moderates protested that the fundamentalists had downplayed the historic emphasis on evangelism to impose a particular reading of Scripture, thereby breaking with the denomination's historic unwillingness to impose creeds.

A revised collection of common principles held by Baptists was set forth by the Southern Baptist Convention in 2000.[16]

In 2004, conservatives at the SBC introduced a resolution calling on all parents to pull their children out of public schools due to the liberal indoctrination there. The resolution was defeated, not because Baptists disagreed with the motivation, but because the SBC did not want to usurp parental authority over how to educate their children.[17]

Fighting Sin

Religious leaders in the South were theologically conservative, but most denominations supported the Social Gospel. The Southern Baptists strongly supported some of the main Social Gospel campaigns, especially against liquor and saloons and sexual slavery. The spirit of today's campaigns against abortion very closely resemble the language and rhetoric and organizing techniques of the prohibition campaigns. The Southern churches were also active opponents of prostitution, obscenity and gambling, and they aligned with like minded politicians like Alben Barkley of Kentucky (who later became Truman's vice president). Most of the state Baptist conventions had "Christian Life Commissions" that echoed the Social Gospel (they were especially active in Alabama and Virginia).

Few local SBC ministers considered issues related to the labor movement until 1930-50, long after Northern Protestant denominations had taken pro-union positions. In 1930, ayt the start of the Great Depression, the SBC issued a statement supporting workers' rights, yet focusing on evangelization as a means of spiritual redemption that would offer relief from the problems of industrialization, rather than proposing structural solutions. The convention's 1938 report was largely drafted in response to fears of communism, urging capital and labor to cooperate to safeguard American political order. Steeped in the patriotism accompanying World War II, convention leaders' 1944 statement looked to the principles of democracy and Christian morality as panaceas for tense industrial relations. Amid postwar Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) drives to unionize Southern textile unions—drives that failed—SBC statements from 1946 to 1948 targeted the dangers of consumerism and decried an increasing polarization of unions and management, arguing that individuals must concentrate on the Kingdom of God and not substitute their personal spirituality with secular group solidarity.[18]

Missionaries

In 1888, the Southern Baptist Convention created the Woman's Missionary Union, which in the early 21st century continued to function as an umbrella group coordinating the activities of local groups. The Laymen's Missionary Movement was founded by the Southern Baptist Convention in 1907, quickly followed by state groups such as the Alabama Baptist Laymen in 1908. These brotherhood organizations have championed evangelism, charitable giving, and fraternal brotherhood.

Ending segregation

Newman (1999) explores the changing attitudes of the Georgia Baptist Convention and Georgia Southern Baptists toward desegregation. He identifies three phases: during 1945-53 the state convention defended segregation and urged equalization of facilities in order to stave off desegregation; during 1954-58 the convention urged Baptists to respond calmly to desegregation rulings and to abide by law and order; from 1959 on the convention called for support of the public schools during a period when the state legislature planned to close all the schools if any desegregated. John Jeter Hurt, Jr., and Jack U. Harwell, who successively edited the Baptist weekly magazine The Christian Index during the 1950s-1960s, exercised a moderate and eventually progressive influence. By 1980 most Georgia Southern Baptists rejected segregation and accepted African Americans in their schools and churches.[19] Newman (2001) examines the more hard-line approach of the Louisiana Baptist Convention, the state's largest Protestant denomination and the dominant religious group in the northern part of Louisiana. It endorsed segregation and barred black church membership during 1954-80. Many Southern Baptists were less firmly committed to maintaining segregation than the actions of their convention would suggest. A majority of Baptists, the moderate segregationists, accepted the demise of Jim Crow and racial segregation in the mid 1960s as the price of maintaining public school education and because attempts to maintain it conflicted with their commitment to law and order.[20] By contrast, the Florida Baptist Convention's took a much more moderate stand on racial desegregation of the state's schools from 1954 to 1980. While initially reluctant in accepting the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, W. G. Stracener, editor of the Florida Baptist Witness, and other leaders of the state convention urged Florida Baptists to oppose efforts to circumvent desegregation because of their "primary commitments to scripture, evangelism, law and order, peace, and public education."[21]

The SBC's Christian Life Commission, established in 1948, aroused controversy when it supported integration during the civil rights movement under the direction of Foy Valentine, and it continues to be a voice of conscience within the SBC under the current head, Richard D. Land, who has led the commission since 1988. Land has said his idea is, "America in 1955 without the racism and without the sexual discrimination against women."[22]

Women

The ordination of women was forbidden between 1845 and 1996. However women comprised a majority of the membership, and wanted outlets for their piety and energy. Starting in 1907, the Personal Service Department of the Woman's Missionary Union (WMU) has encouraged women to participate in social reform as a form of missionary activity, making explicit the connection to the Social Gospel.[23] Flowers (2000) explores the history of the WMU and its emphasis on social reform in the Social Gospel mode from its founding in 1888 to the eve of the Great Depression in 1928. WMU activities reveal a commitment to its historical ideal of service as both material and spiritual.[24] In the late-20th-century conflict arose between the SBC leadership the WMU. The SBC leaders sought to return the WMU to more traditional evangelistic action, with an emphasis on attacking homosexuality and abortion, and away from the type of broad-gauge social work WMU women had been doing. In 1995 the SBC terminated a 105-year relationship with the WMU when the WMU decided to affiliate with the breakaway moderate Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and to become more involved in social issues.

The SBC became formally committed to the husband's "headship" in marriage at its convention in 1998, and at the same time ousted "evangelical feminists" from some of its seminaries. In October 1997 a mass rally in Washington, D.C., saw the culmination of the rise of the Promise Keepers, a loosely organized, mixed-faith grouping that campaigned for male leadership and female submission within the family.

Politics

Early in the 20th century, some leaders, such as Mullins, attempted to forge ties with Northern evangelicals. The effort collapsed in the 1920s when the "Scopes Monkey Trial" showed an unbridgeable gap between the regions on the issues such as evolution.. Thereafter the SBC stood aloof and avoided any connections with other religious bodies. The lingering influence of Landmarkism, Southern regionalism, and Northern opposition to Southern race relations stood in the way of closer connections. Though its theology had sectarian elements, the SBC dominated white Southern culture into the 1970s. By the 1980s, however, conservatives had taken firm control of the SBC and saw value in allying with Northern evangelicals because both felt threatened by secular humanism and the Left. No longer as dominant in the South, the SBC shared with the neo-evangelicals in "straddling the Christ-and-culture-in-paradox and Christ-and-the-transformer-of-culture positions." Religious alliances were possible because evangelicals North and South had arrived at similar cultural positions, and the SBC membership itself was growing rapidly outside the South by appealing to migrating Southerners and even more to like-minded Northerners.[25]

To form a successful political coalition, SBC leaders had to rethink the relationship of church and state. Hankins (1998) examines the thought of key leaders of the SBC from the 1940s through the mid-1990s who advocated accommodationism - the belief that the government should actively support and promote Christianity. This was a new idea, for the Baptists had long insisted on a sharp separation of church and state. However influential conservatives popularized accommodationism in the SBC since the 1980s.[26] Politically most Southern Baptist leaders had shown little interest in partisan politics before about 1980, when Ronald Reagan encouraged prominent ministers to form a political coalition with the Republican Party based on moral issues, including opposition to abortion and support for school prayer. Many GOP leaders have joined SBC churches (including Newt Gingrich and John McCain, but the first insider to show wide political appeal was Mike Huckabee in 2008.[27]


Although Southern whites began voting Republican in presidential elections in the 1960s, they considered themselves Democrats and voted for state and local Democrats for many more years. The table shows that SBC pastors were only 27% Republican in the 1970s; they then moved into the GOP, followed by their parishioners a few years later. By 2004 all elements of the SBC were heavily Republican in orientation. The GOP identification slipped a little in 2008, but about 80% of the Southern Baptists voted for McCain over Barack Obama.

White Southern Protestants: Party Identification: percent Republican
 1972-1980  1982-1990  1992-2000   2004      Gain   
All 32% 39% 50% 58%  +26%
SBC members 27% 38% 46% 65%  +38%
SBC pastors 27% 66% 77% 81%  +54%
other evangelicals 28% 37% 52% 61%  +33%

Table shows % who consider themselves Republican; others are Democrats and Independents.
Source: Lyman A. Kellstedt et al., "The Soul of the South: Religion and Southern Politics in the Twenty-first Century" in Charles S. Bullock III and Mark J. Rozell, eds. The New Politics of the Old South (2007) p. 316


See also

Bibliography

Secondary sources

  • Basden, Paul, ed. Has Our Theology Changed? Southern Baptist Thought since 1845. (1994). 344 pp.
  • Baker, Robert. The Southern Baptist Convention and Its People, 1607–1972. Broadman Press, 1974.
  • Barnes, William. The Southern Baptist Convention, 1845–1953 Broadman Press, 1954.
  • Eighmy, John. Churches in Cultural Captivity: A History of the Social Attitudes of Southern Baptists. University of Tennessee Press, 1972.
  • Encyclopedia of Southern Baptists: Presenting Their History, Doctrine, Polity, Life, Leadership, Organization & Work Knoxville: Broadman Press, v 1–2 (1958), 1500 pp; 2 supplementary volumes 1958 and 1962; vol 5 = Index, 1984
  • Fuller, A. James. Chaplain to the Confederacy: Basil Manly and Baptist Life in the Old South (2002)
  • Gatewood, Willard. Controversy in the 1920s: Fundamentalism, Modernism, and Evolution. Vanderbilt University Press, 1969.
  • Harper, Keith. "Old Landmarkism: a Historiographical Appraisal." Baptist History and Heritage 1990 25(2): 31-40, reviews the scholarly studies
  • Harvey, Paul. Redeeming the South: Religious Cultures and Racial Identities among Southern Baptists, 1865–1925. (1997) online edition
  • Heyrman, Christine Leigh. Southern Cross: The Beginnings of the Bible Belt (1998) 1770–1860
  • Hill, Samuel, et al. Encyclopedia of Religion in the South (2005), comprehensive coverage
  • Leonard, Bill J. Baptist Ways: A History (2003), comprehensive international history
  • Leonard, Bill J. Baptists in America. (2005), general survey and history by leading Southern Baptist
  • Leonard, Bill J. "Independent Baptists: from Sectarian Minority to 'Moral Majority'". Church History. Volume: 56. Issue: 4. 1987. pp 504+. online edition
  • Lindman, Janet Moore. Bodies of Belief: Baptist Community in Early America (2008)
  • Lumpkin, William L. Baptist History in the South: Tracing through the Separates the Influence of the Great Awakening, 1754–1787 (1995)
  • Marsden, George. Fundamentalism and American Culture: The Shaping of 20th Century Evangelicalism. Oxford University Press, 1980. the major scholarly history of the movement
  • Morgan, David T. Southern Baptist Sisters: In Search of Status, 1845–2000. (2003)
  • Patterson, W. Morgan. "Baptist Growth in America: Evaluation of Trends." Baptist History and Heritage 1979 14(1): 16-26.
  • Scales, T. Laine. All That Fits a Woman: Training Southern Baptist Women for Charity and Mission, 1907–1926 Mercer U. Press 2002
  • Shurden, Walter B. and Lori Redwine Varnadoe. "The Origins of the Southern Baptist Convention: a Historiographical Study." Baptist History and Heritage 2002 37(1): 71-96. How 12 church historians have interpreted the organization's 1845 founding. Although early historians ignored the importance of the issue of slavery, gradually historians began to realize the xcentrality of the issue in the group's founding.
  • Spain, Rufus B. At Ease in Zion: A Social History of Southern Baptists, 1865–1900 (1961)
  • Sutton, Jerry. The Baptist Reformation: The Conservative Resurgence in the Southern Baptist Convention (2000).
  • Tull, James E. "The Landmark Movement: an Historical and Theological Appraisal." Baptist History and Heritage 1975 10(1): 3-18. in JSTOR
  • Tull, James E., and Morris Ashcraft. High Church Baptists in the South: The Origin, Nature, and Influence of Landmarkism (2000) 182pp
    • Tull, James E. "A Study of Southern Baptist Landmarkism in the Light of Historical Baptist Ecclesiology," Church History, Vol. 31, No. 3 (Sep., 1962), pp. 359–360, short summary
  • Wills, Gregory A. Democratic Religion: Freedom, Authority, and Church Discipline in the Baptist South, 1785–1900. (1997) online edition
  • Yarnell III, Malcolm B. The Formation of Christian Doctrine (2007), on Baptist theology

Since 1960s

  • Ammerman, Nancy, Baptist Battles: Social Change and Religious Conflict in the Southern Baptist Convention. Rutgers University Press, 1990.
  • Ammerman, Nancy, ed. Southern Baptists Observed University of Tennessee Press, 1993.
  • Farnsley II, Arthur Emery, Southern Baptist Politics: Authority and Power in the Restructuring of an American Denomination (1994) online edition
  • Hankins, Barry. Uneasy in Babylon: Southern Baptist Conservatives and American Culture. (2002) 344 pp Argues that Baptist conservatives see themselves as cultural warriors critiquing a secular and liberal America
  • Kell, Carl L. and L. Raymond Camp, In the Name of the Father: The Rhetoric of the New Southern Baptist Convention. (1999) online edition
  • Leonard, Bill J. God's Last and Only Hope: The Fragmentation of the Southern Baptist Convention. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1990.
  • Morgan, David T. The New Crusades, the New Holy Land: Conflict in the Southern Baptist Convention, 1969-1991. (1996). 246 pp.
  • Rosenberg, Ellen. The Southern Baptists: A Subculture in Transition. University of Tennessee Press, 1989.
  • Smith, Oran P. The Rise of Baptist Republicanism (1997), on recent voting behavior

State and regional studies

  • McBeth, Harry Leon. Texas Baptists: A Sesquicentennial History (1998)
  • Williams, C. Fred, S. Ray Granade, and Kenneth M. Startup. A System and Plan: Arkansas Baptist State Convention, 1848-1998 (1998)
  • Flynt, Wayne. Alabama Baptists in the Heart of Dixie (1998)
  • Wardin, Jr., Albert W. Tennessee Baptists: A Comprehensive History, 1779-1999 (1999).

Primary sources

  • Baker, Robert. ed. A Baptist Source Book. Broadman Press, 1966.
  • Glenmary Research Center. Religious Congregations & Membership in the United States 2000.
  • Kell, Carl L., ed. Exiled: Voices of the Southern Baptist Convention Holy War. (2006) 228pp
  • McBeth, H. Leon, (ed.) A Sourcebook for Baptist Heritage (1990), primary sources for Baptist history.
  • McGlothlin, W. J. (ed.) Baptist Confessions of Faith. Philadelphia: The American Baptist Publication Society, 1911.
  • Shurden, Walter B. and Randy Shepley, eds. Going for the Jugular: A Documentary History of the SBC Holy War. [Mercer U. Press, 1996. 281 pp.

External links

Notes

  1. There are four other national groups, American Baptist Churches (strongest in the North), National Baptist Convention (African Americans, strong in the South and northern cities), the Conservative Baptist Association, and the Progressive National Baptist Convention (a more liberal body of African Americans, strong in the South and northern cities).
  2. Bill J. Leonard, "Baptists in the South: a New Connectionalism." American Baptist Quarterly 2000 19(3): 208-221.
  3. Dylan T. Lovan, "Southern Baptist Convention opens in Kentucky," Associated Press Jun 23, 2009
  4. But for an alternative view see Janet Moore Lindman, Bodies of Belief: Baptist Community in Early America (2008)
  5. "The Oldtime Religion," Time Dec. 05, 1955
  6. Paul Basden, Has Our Theology Changed? Southern Baptist Thought since 1845. (1994)
  7. Paul Basden, Has Our Theology Changed? Southern Baptist Thought since 1845. (1994)
  8. Hugh Wamble, "Landmarkism: Doctrinaire Ecclesiology among Baptists." Church History 1964 33(4): 429-447. [ http://www.jstor.org/stable/3162835 in JSTOR]
  9. Chad W. Hall, “When Orphans Became Heirs: J. R. Graves and the Landmark Baptists,” Baptist History and Heritage 2002 37(1): 112-127.
  10. Bob Compton, "J. M. Pendleton: a Nineteenth-century Baptist Statesman (1811-1891)". Baptist History and Heritage 1975 10(1): 28-35.
  11. James E. Taulman, "The Life and Writings of Amos Cooper Dayton (1813-1865)." Baptist History and Heritage 1975 10(1): 36-43.
  12. W. Morgan Patterson, "The Influence of Landmarkism among Baptists." Baptist History and Heritage 1975 10(1): 44-55.
  13. H. Clark Maddux, Edgar Young Mullins and Evangelical Developments in the Southern Baptist Convention." Baptist History and Heritage 1998 33(2): 62-73.
  14. George E. Bagley, "Avery Hamilton Reid," Alabama Baptist Historian 1996 32(1): 9-29. 0002-4147
  15. See Hankins (2002).
  16. see text
  17. see news
  18. H. B. Cavalcanti, "God and Labor in the South: Southern Baptists and The Right to Unionize, 1930-1950." Journal of Church and State 1998 40(3): 639-660.
  19. Mark Newman, "The Georgia Baptist Convention and Desegregation, 1945-1980." Georgia Historical Quarterly 1999 83(4): 683-711.
  20. Mark Newman, "The Louisiana Baptist Convention and Desegregation, 1954-1980." Louisiana History 2001 42(4): 389-418.
  21. Mark Newman, "The Florida Baptist Convention and Desegregation, 1954-1980." Florida Historical Quarterly 1999 78(1): 1-22.
  22. Quoted in Hankins (2002) pp. 59-60
  23. Carol Crawford Holcomb, "The Kingdom at Hand: the Social Gospel and the Personal Service Department of Woman's Missionary Union, Auxiliary to the Southern Baptist Convention." Baptist History and Heritage 2000 35(2): 49-66.
  24. Betsy Flowers, "Southern Baptist Evangelicals or Social Gospel Liberals? The Woman's Missionary Union and Social Reform, 1888 to 1928." American Baptist Quarterly 2000 19(2): 106-128.
  25. Barry Hankins, Southern Baptists and Northern Evangelicals: Cultural Factors and The Nature Of Religious Alliances". Religion and American Culture 1997 7(2): 271-298.
  26. Barry Hankins, “The Evangelical Accommodationism of Southern Baptist Convention Conservatives." Baptist History And Heritage 1998 33(1): 54-65.
  27. Oran P. Smith, The Rise of Baptist Republicanism (1997)