- By Joni B. Hannigan
-
ATLANTA (BP) July 2, 2001 --Drawing on the accounts of division
in the early church expressed in the New Testament books of First
Corinthians and Acts, former president Jimmy Carter, a Sunday
School teacher and sometimes deacon told participants to the
Cooperative Baptist Fellowship's annual general assembly June
29 to focus on a single statement in order to work together
to fulfill a global mission.
Calling the disciple James' remarks concerning the debate among
early Christians about circumcision in Acts 15 an "authoritative
statement, in extent, summarizing and boiling down the premise
of the Christian faith to asimple statement," Carter said
the apostle Paul, however, said it best in 1 Corinthians 2:1-2
when Paul said, in part, "'...for I determined not to know
anything among you save but Jesus Christ and Him crucified.'"
"The complexities and details and arguments about political
intrigue and control and women deacons or women pastors or homosexuality,"
Carter paused, "those things in God's eyes fade into
relative insignificance, as did circumcision in the first few
days of the church."
Carter said Paul's remarks represent "a broad enough of
a foundation for all of us to inhabit and work together,"
urging CBF and "traditional" Baptists to lead out "more
aggressively to another to assume the common ground."
Carter's remarks came at a time when participants to the CBF
assembly meeting June 28-30 at Atlanta's Georgia World Congress
Center were still wrangling over a statement released last October
prohibiting its funds from going to pro-homosexual organizations
and from hiring or sending missionaries who are practicing homosexuals.
In a coordinating council business meeting on June 27 members
refused to rescind the original motion creating the statement,
while in a general assembly business meeting the morning of June
29, participants made a motion which sent the matter to a breakout
session later that morning for discussion. At that session, where
nearly 300 participants discussed the statement and motion for
almost an hour, a motion was made to suspend action on the statement
for a year while a study committee examines it and reports back
to next year's general assembly. Finally, on the last morning
of the assembly, June 30, participants voted to affirm the motion
made June 29 to suspend the statement.
CBF is a decade old denomination-like organization of mostly
former Southern Baptists who remain critical of the conservative
leadership in the Southern Baptist Convention.
Speaking of his own spiritual journey, Carter, who this past
year denounced the Southern Baptist Convention over its doctrinal
statement, said he considered basic principles that have guided
his life and his work at the Carter Center to "exemplify
CBF" as well, where he and Rosalynn have found a "new
home." "We don't duplicate or compete, we encompass
those who have different political and theological opinions and
we deal in action, not just verbiage," said Carter.
The three principals he identified are:
-
- -- No competition with any other organization. "We
don't duplicate what others do. We try to fill vacuums and go
where we are most needed, where people need us the most."
-- Non-partisan and non-denominational. When a difficult
issue arises, Carter says he invites along a Republican like
Colin Powell to go with him.
-- Action. "We don't just talk. Unless there is a
direct action, component, we don't call a conference. If there
are answers to a question and a solution to the problem, we are
deeply involved in the solutions to the problem."
- With his voice hoarse at time, the smiling and tanned Georgia
elder told about 7,000 participants at the assembly his experiences
in the White House also shaped his journey. "I had to
change some of my personal religious habits," reminisced
Carter. "I had always been taught that Baptists and Catholics
were on the other size of the chasm of light, that they were
competitive with us, kind of the enemy of us, some of struggling
for the souls and minds of the poor innocent people in China
... and in other places."
About this time in 1979, Carter said he was visited by the newly
elected president of the SBC. He said he was told then he had
become a secular humanist, but that there was hope he would become
a Christian again. "I had no idea what this meant,"
admitted Carter to the laughter of CBF participants. "I
went home and asked Rosa, 'Rosa what in the world is a secular
humanist?'"
Many things have changed since he's left the White House, said
Carter, but not the "argument or debate among Baptists."
"It's regrettable that we find this division among people
who express exactly the same commitment to follow our savior
Jesus Christ," he said. After several meetings at the Carter
Center in the 1970's when he tried to bring Baptists together
to find common ground, Carter said "not much came about
that would ease the superficial, the non-important differences
between us, at least as measured by God."
"The important things -- faith in Christ -- were there,
and a belief in justice and peace and humility and service, compassion
and love, all were there -- there were superficial things in
the eyes of God that persisted."
A statement was issued about being kind to one another, but division
still continued, according to Carter who said more recent meetings
with "traditional" moderate Baptists have been more
hopeful. Citing meetings that have included CBF coordinator Daniel
Vestal, CBF moderator Donna Forrester and leaders from the Baptist
General Convention of Texas and the Association of Baptists in
Virginia, Carter said they have worked on finding "a common
ground on which we might form partnerships that might be more
effective in carrying out the mandates of God with the leadership
and inspiration of the Holy Spirit in the name of Christ."
Reading a newly drafted statement from the platform, Carter admitted
it included some "very controversial" things, but was
agreed on by those who had met together in partnership: "We
receive the Holy Scriptures as inspired and authoritative. Agreeing
that the criterion by which the Bible is to be interpreted is
Jesus Christ.Although often helpful, human statements of faith
are not to be regarded as infallible, nor as official creeds
carrying mandatory authority or as instruments of doctrinal accountability.
"We believe in the principle of local church autonomy, with
the understanding that a local congregation can use its own prayerful
judgment in seeking and following God's will -- this includes
a selection of pastors and other leaders.Our faith continues
to be based on the historical Baptist principles of soul competency,
priesthood of believers, separation of church, religious freedom,
compassion for unbelievers, and respect for all persons as inherently
equal before God.
"Since every believer and every church is called by Christ
to share the gospel with all people, we are committed to a greatly
strengthened global mission and the need to serve in close partnership
with each other and with our missionary force to achieve this
paramount goal. The education of future Baptist leaders is crucial
for the success of this effort.
-
- "Directly and through the BGCT and Baptist Association
of Virginia, and the CBF, churches need a way to participate
in this common commitment with their personal and financial support.
A global mission partnership should be established through which
support for mission and education should be established."
While a "little long and verbose," Carter said the
statement is echoed in a summary written by Daniel Vestal and
published in Baptists Today. "It's not all that difficult,
in my opinion, to find a common statement," asserted Carter.
"... It's good for us to remember that this altercation
or argument debate or division is nothing new," Carter said,
in beginning his remarks about the disciples' New Testament statements
to the early church.
"I think we need to have a world mission vision based on
the practical application of world mission work," said Carter.
"And this is presumptuous on my part, not being a missionary,
not being a pastor or having studied theology on my part, but
I believe that what Christ did was not just to preach, but that
he ministered to people in such a fashion that they could not
control their commitment to follow him."
Describing a missionary couple from their church that began work
in the 1970's, Carter said they were ultimately responsible for
building a concrete bridge, 81 new churches, 167 wells, and 21
irrigation ponds. Within 80 miles, Carter said, over 5,000 had
accepted Christ.
"I think we should reach out to other traditional Baptists
to moderate Baptists -- not only in this country but in Europe
or other places and to form a coalition or partnership that would
greatly strengthen what we can do.But we have to set the example,"
said Carter. "If there are other Baptists who don't want
to respond, don't want to cooperate, forget them, forget them
and move on, as Christians, and as Baptists -- just following
Jesus." [ http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?ID=11234 ] |