Texas Executive Board Ousts Church which Ordained Homosexual

 

                                                                                                                                            Vol. XI, No. 3, February 1998


The executive board of the Baptist General Convention of Texas voted Feb. 24 to no longer receive funds from an Austin church which ordained a homosexual as a deacon. The board, meeting in Dallas, also asked that University Baptist Church of Austin not state any affiliation with the BGCT on printed materials or on its Internet site. The vote was described as overwhelming among the board's 200-plus members. The Austin Baptist Association disfellowshipped the church in 1995 over its 1994 ordination of the homosexual deacon.

"We are not criticizing their ministry to homosexuals," said Charles Davenport, pastor of First Baptist Church, Tulia, and chairman of the administrative committee that unanimously recommended the action to the BGCT executive board. "We commend their ministry," Davenport was quoted by the Austin newspaper as saying. However, "ministry to is different from affirmation of," Davenport said, noting the convention's position: "We are simply saying we believe homosexuality and homosexual practice is contrary to Scripture."

Larry Bethune, pastor of University Baptist, said the decision is an attempt by the convention to dictate policy to a local church and sends a "damning message to homosexuals that can only be interpreted as hatred in the name of Christ," the newspaper reported.

The statement adopted by the executive board countered Bethune's view on church autonomy. "Under the concept of the autonomy of the local church, the church is, of course, free to take such a posture," the statement said. "The convention is also free to determine that a church has adopted moral positions related to racism, sexuality, honesty, violence or other moral concerns which are unscriptural." And the statement noted that churches should seek to minister to all people, "including those who continue in sinful practices. We cannot, however, approve of churches' endorsing homosexual practice as biblically legitimate."

Dee Slocum, an Amarillo pastor and vice president of a breakaway conservative group, Southern Baptists of Texas, told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram he agreed with the state convention's decision but described it as merely a political move by moderates trying to prove they are not too liberal.

Bethune, on the church's Internet site Feb. 25, wrote, "In spite of private confessions to our church members by BGCT leaders that this action was directly motivated by Fundamentalist pressures upon them, other leaders publicly denied any political motivation to the motion."

The church has been criticized for stating on its Internet site that it sponsors "Open Circle," a program for homosexual men and women, the Fort Worth newspaper reported. According to the website, the church welcomes "gay, lesbian, bisexual, straight and transgendered people working toward unity and inclusion in our denomination communities."

Bethune, in his remarks to the board, according to the Austin newspaper, said, "You may not all agree with the way our church ministers with gays and lesbians and their families -- in fact, we don't all agree at UBC -- but we are creating one of the few safe places for your Baptist homosexual children to work out their salvation."

Board member Gerald Blankenship of Lubbock, however, maintained the convention had to send a clear message about University Baptist's actions; otherwise, "we're allowing Satan to crack the very foundation of this church."

University Baptist Church also is listed on the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship's Internet site under its "CBF Church Links" section. The CBF has no prohibition against accepting funds from churches which ordain or marry homosexuals. The CBF, a group of moderate Baptists critical of SBC leadership, receives funds through the missions networking channel of the BGCT. [BP]