Texarkana Gazette

Southern Baptists to pastors: Hold line on homosexual­ity

- By Rachel Zoll

NASHVILLE, Tenn.—More than a thousand evangelica­l pastors and others— for a three-day conference to steel the resolve of Christians who preach that gay relationsh­ips are sinful—were asked a simple question: How many live in a state that recognizes same-sex marriage?

Hands rose all across the convention hall.

“This moral revolution is happening at warp speed,” said the Rev. Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theologica­l Seminary. “This is a real challenge to us on biblical authority.”

Speakers at the event said they understood they were on the losing end of the culture war on marriage. But they were prepared to be the voice of a moral minority because gay marriage is a “rejection of God’s law,” according to Mohler. He said evangelica­ls needed to have “a lot of agonizing conversati­ons” about how to move forward.

The conference, called “The Gospel, Homosexual­ity and the Future of Marriage,” is taking place not only against the backdrop of expanding gay marriage, but also amid a small but vocal movement of evangelica­ls who publicly advocate greater acceptance of gays. Several of the advocates attended the conference and held behind-the-scenes meetings with evangelica­l leaders to seek common ground.

“My goal here is to meet as many people as I can who disagree with me and talk over coffee,” said Justin Lee, founder of the Gay Christian Network, during a break at the opening session Monday. His organizati­on brings together Christians who differ over whether gays faithful to the Bible should remain celibate or can have same-sex relationsh­ips.

Southern Baptist leaders said they would be expressing their views in a way that was humble and compassion­ate, but rooted in the theologica­l belief that marriage is only between a man and a woman. Each participan­t was given a bagful of books and pamphlets, with titles such as, “Love Into Light: The Gospel, The Homosexual and The Church,” and “Loving My (LGBT) Neighbor,” meant to help pastors articulate their stand against same-sex relationsh­ips.

Mohler, the most prominent Southern Baptist intellectu­al, said from the stage that he was wrong years ago when he said same-sex attraction could be changed. The Rev. Russell Moore, director of the Southern Baptist’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, which organized the conference, drew applause when he condemned anti-gay bullying and called on Christians to address the problem of homelessne­ss for gay and lesbian youth as “a human dignity issue.” He said parents shouldn’t shun their gay children.

“You’ve been given a mission of reconcilia­tion,” Moore told the audience. “Jesus is not afraid to speak the truth, but Jesus is not shocked by people or disgusted by people.”

However, some speakers took a harder line. Erik Stanley of the Alliance Defending Freedom, the law firm defending Christian business owners and others who refuse to serve gay weddings, said it was a myth that the 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard in Laramie, Wyoming, was a hate crime. He argued gays wanted “unfettered sexual liberty” while silencing all dissent.

Most of the morning sessions Tuesday featured Christians such as Rosaria Butterfiel­d who had been attracted to members of the same-sex but say they were now married to someone of the opposite sex or had overcome their attraction­s. Butterfiel­d said evangelica­ls need to “repent of anti-gay rhetoric,” and befriend gays and lesbians instead of trying to “fix” them. (Moore said Southern Baptists do not support “reparative therapy” for gays based on psychologi­cal counseling and do not believe people can necessaril­y eliminate same-sex attraction. But he said the denominati­on believes Gospel teaching can help people live chastely while being attracted to people of the same gender.)

Matthew Vines, author of “God and the Gay Christian,” has drawn more than 800,000 views on YouTube for his lecture challengin­g the theology that drives evangelica­l opposition to same-gender relationsh­ips. He said he was encouraged that some speakers have been “approachin­g the conversati­on with more respect and sensitivit­y than has often been the case in the past.” But he said their stand on gay relationsh­ips still “causes serious harm to LGBT people.”

Vines met privately with Mohler, who had written an e-book response to Vines, titled “God and the Gay Christian?” Both men said the meeting was a cordial discussion of Scripture and they planned to stay in touch. Separately, about two dozen Christian advocates for gay acceptance and evangelica­l leaders who participat­ed in the conference also met privately Monday night. Participan­ts agreed they would not comment afterward.

In an interview, Mohler said he expected to see some evangelica­l churches splitting off to accept gay relationsh­ips in years ahead. Evangelica­ls in the millennial generation, ages 18-33, are twice as likely as their elders to support same-sex marriage, according to a survey released in February by the Public Religion Research Institute. Southern Baptists last month cut ties with a California congregati­on, New Heart Community Church, whose pastor accepted same-sex marriage after his son came out as gay. But Moore believes only a small minority of evangelica­ls will come to accept same-sex relationsh­ips as they struggle with expressing their opposition in the current climate.

“I’m not worried about churches in our tradition conforming to the culture. I’m worried about them not effectivel­y engaging the culture,” Moore said in an interview. “We have to be able to speak with conviction about what we believe. We have to speak to people.”

 ??  ?? Rev. Russell Moore, left, director of the Southern Baptist’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, leads a discussion during the group’s national conference Tuesday in Nashville, Tenn. Southern Baptists organized the three-day event to strengthen...
Rev. Russell Moore, left, director of the Southern Baptist’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, leads a discussion during the group’s national conference Tuesday in Nashville, Tenn. Southern Baptists organized the three-day event to strengthen...

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