The Columbus Dispatch

Amid uproar, Southern Baptists condemn ‘alt-right’ movement

- By Rachel Zoll and Angie Wang

PHOENIX — Southern Baptists on Wednesday formally condemned the political movement known as the “alt-right,” in a national meeting that was thrown into turmoil after leaders initially refused to take up the issue.

The denominati­on’s annual convention in Phoenix voted to “decry every form of racism, including alt-right white supremacy, as antithetic­al to the Gospel of Jesus Christ” and “denounce and repudiate white supremacy and every form of racial and ethnic hatred as a scheme of the devil.”

Tuesday night, Southern Baptist officials who oversaw the resolution­s had refused to introduce a different repudiatio­n of the “alt-right,” which emerged dramatical­ly during the U.S. presidenti­al election, mixing racism, white nationalis­m and populism.

Barrett Duke, who leads the resolution­s committee, had said the original document contained inflammato­ry and broad language “potentiall­y implicatin­g” conservati­ves who do not support the “alt-right” movement.

Introducin­g the new statement Wednesday, Duke apologized “for the pain and confusion that we created,” but said the committee had been concerned about potentiall­y giving the appearance of hating their enemies. Duke said the committee members “share your abhorrence of racism” and were grateful for the chance to “speak on ‘altright’ racism in particular and all racism in general.”

The resolution was adopted after a short but emotional discussion.

“We are saying that white supremacy and racist ideologies are dangerous because they oppress our brothers and sisters in Christ,” said the Rev. Russell Moore, who leads the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, the Southern Baptist public policy arm. “If we’re a Jesus people, let’s stand where Jesus stands.”

Charles Hedman of Capitol Hill Baptist Church in South Bend, Indiana, said far-right groups had been distributi­ng racist material outside the convention hall Tuesday night. He said some pastors had told him they would have to leave the denominati­on if the convention failed to denounce white supremacy Wednesday.

“We must stand strong,” Hedman said. “We must all issue an apology that we didn’t act on this yesterday.”

The initial proposal that Southern Baptists had rejected came from a prominent black Southern Baptist pastor, the Rev. William McKissic of Arlington, Texas. His resolution repudiated “retrograde ideologies, xenophobic biases and racial bigotries of the ‘alt-right’ that seek to subvert our government.”

 ?? [ROSS D. FRANKLIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Southern Baptist Convention delegates vote to formally condemn the political movement known as the “alt-right” during their national meeting in Phoenix on Wednesday.
[ROSS D. FRANKLIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Southern Baptist Convention delegates vote to formally condemn the political movement known as the “alt-right” during their national meeting in Phoenix on Wednesday.

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