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Jimmy
Carter, October 2000
| The
following is a personal reflection from President Jimmy
Carter as a Baptist layman. He also promotes the hearing
of an explanation by Dr. Charles Wade, Executive Director
of the Baptist General Convention of Texas |
To
My Fellow Baptists,
Like
millions of other Baptists, I have been deeply distressed by the
unpleasant and counterproductive divisions within our denomination.
In November 1997 and March 1998, invited two dozen Baptist leaders
to The Carter Center, in an attempt to overcome differences that
were impeding our common mission "to bring about a spiritual
awakening in our nation and around the world."
The
group who attended included six presidents of the Southern Baptist
Convention and leaders of the Women's Missionary Union, American
Baptists, Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, the Texas and Virginia
Baptist Conventions, and other prominent organizations. We finally
agreed on a common statement, pledging ourselves to a concerted
prayer effort, mutual respect for each other, a spirit of racial
reconciliation, unfettered religious liberty, and "to seek
other ways to cooperate to achieve common goals, without breaching
our Baptist polity or theological integrity, in order that people
may come to know Christ as Savior, and so that God may be glorified
in ever increasing measure."
I
had never been involved in the political struggle for control
of the SBC, and have no desire to do so. My hope was that, as
a traditional Baptist layman, I could find some channel through
which I could help fulfill our Christian commitments. But since
that brief interlude of apparent harmony, I have been disappointed
and feel excluded by the adoption of policies and an increasingly
rigid SBC creed, including some provisions that violate the basic
premises of my Christian faith. I have finally decided that, after
65 years, I can no longer be associated with the Southern Baptist
Convention.
What
am I to do? I'll certainly continue in my role as a deacon and
Sunday School teacher at Maranatha Baptist Church and support
sending half our mission contribution to the Cooperative Baptist
Fellowship. In addition to our fellow church members, Rosalynn
and I have been trying to identify other traditional Baptists
who share such beliefs as separation of church and state, servanthood
of pastors, priesthood of believers, a free religious press, and
equality of women.
We
agree with the adherence of most Texas Baptists, Virginia Baptists,
and members of CBF to these principles as expressed in the 1963
Baptist Faith and Message.
As
Georgia Baptists, we are quite concerned by the effort of SBC
leaders to impose their newly adopted creed on our state convention.
Our prayer is that we can avoid this divisive action, and adhere
to the traditional beliefs that, for generations, have sustained
our ancestors and us in a spirit of unity and cooperation. Not
having any religious or theological training, I am not qualified
to explain how profound and revolutionary are the changes in the
Baptist Faith and Message that are being proposed to unsuspecting
Baptists. The best explanation that I have heard is by Dr. Charles
Wade, Executive Director of the Baptist General Convention of
Texas, who attended our meetings at The Carter Center almost three
years ago. I hope you will listen carefully to this tape of his
remarks concerning the creedal decisions of the 2000 SBC assembly,
and share it with others who might help to preserve the Baptist
heritage that is so precious to us.
Sincerely,
Jimmy Carter
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