2003 Archives
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editorial At Southwestern, Patterson will finish what he started_63003
Posted: 6/27/03
EDITORIAL:
At Southwestern, Patterson will finish what he startedPaige Patterson's election to the presidency of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary should help Texas Baptists clarify their feelings about the Fort Worth school. If you like what has happened in the Southern Baptist Convention for the past 25 years, you're going to love what's about to happen to Southwestern. If you don't, you won't.
Patterson, after all, was the theological mastermind of the “conservative resurgence” or “fundamentalist takeover” of the SBC. In the early 1970s, young Patterson, then president of the Criswell Center for Biblical Studies in Dallas, teamed up with Houston judge Paul Pressler to determine how their kind of Baptists–they called themselves “conservatives”; others called them “fundamentalists”–could control the SBC. Pressler figured out how the legal and political mechanism should work. Patterson supplied the theological rationale. They claimed the SBC leadership needed to be changed, because the “liberals” in charge deny the truth of God's word.
Paige Patterson helped engineer the fundamentalist takeover of the Southern Baptist Convention a quarter-century ago; you can count on him to finish the job at Southwestern Seminary. This “don't believe the Bible” ruse worked flawlessly. For their opponents, it became as hard to answer as, “Say 'yes' or 'no': 'Have you quit beating your wife?'” So-called moderates, who struggle with short answers and sound bites, always came off as tentative and defensive. So the assertion stuck. “If they can't clearly respond to the charge, it must be true,” Southern Baptists seemed to think. Consequently, the SBC elected one fundamentalist president after another. This allowed the fundamentalists to dominate the process for selecting trustees to SBC institutions and eventually to gain complete control of the national convention.
10/14/2003 - By John Rutledge
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Anonymous gift will enable CBF to appoint missionaries despite budget shortfalls_71403
Posted 6/28/03
CBF church starting strategist Phil Hester introduces Mary Beth Caffee, who is starting a church in Maine, one of 40 CBF new church starts across the nation. Hester was an advertising executive in Houston before entering seminary later in life and then starting a church in California. Anonymous gift will enable CBF to appoint
missionaries despite budget shortfallsBy Mark Wingfield
Managing Editor
CHARLOTTE, N.C.–Gifts of $9 million from an anonymous donor will enable the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship to continue to appoint new missionaries next year despite budget shortfalls.
10/14/2003 - By John Rutledge
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