Posted: 1/09/07
Carter, Clinton use convocation
to call Baptists to compassion
By Marv Knox & Greg Warner
ATLANTA—Baptists from across North America will convene in Atlanta early next year to emphasize compassion rather than the racial, theological and social conflict that has divided them for 160 years.
Headed by former U.S presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton—two of the world’s most famous Baptist laymen—about 80 leaders of 40 Baptist organizations gathered at the Carter Center in Atlanta Jan. 9 to announce the Celebration of a New Baptist Covenant. The event is tentatively set for Jan. 30-Feb. 1, 2008.
The convocation will be “one of the most historic events, at least in the history of Baptists in this country, maybe Christianity,” Carter predicted.
Baptist harmony in the United States was broken in the mid-1800s when Baptist division over race and slavery overwhelmed the missionary spirit that previously brought them together, Carter said.
“We hope to recertify our common faith without regard to race, ethnicity, partisanship and geography,” he added.
Participants in the recent meeting reflected his wish. They included representatives of groups connected to the North American Baptist Fellowship, a 20-million-member regional affiliate of the Baptist World Alliance. Leaders of the four predominantly African-American National Baptist conventions also attended, as did leaders of U.S.-based Hispanic, Japanese, Laotian and Russian-Ukrainian Baptist groups, plus Canadian Baptists and heads of Baptist conventions in Missouri, Texas and Virginia.
They planned to demonstrate Baptist harmony based on the themes Jesus preached in his inaugural sermon, which was recorded in the book of Luke. Quoting the Prophet Isaiah, Jesus said: “The Spirit of the Lord … has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim that captives will be released, that the blind will see, that the oppressed will be set free, and that the time of the Lord’s favor has come.”
Those themes comprise the core of the North American Baptist Covenant, drafted last April in a meeting at the Carter Center and attended by about 20 of the Baptists who announced the 2008 event. At the time, they announced their intention to rally Baptists around Christ’s compassion for the people he described as “the least of these” in society.
In two meetings since, leaders have acknowledged a potential for division over their history of racial tension and theological dissension. But they that agreed Jesus’ mandate, as well as their shared heritage and core commitments, provide a platform for working together.
The overall endeavor is the brainchild of Carter and Bill Underwood, an attorney and professor who became president of Mercer University last summer.
“Baptists—North and South; from the U.S. and Canada and Mexico; black, white and brown; progressive, moderate and conservative in theology—can focus on issues that bind us together as followers of Christ,” Underwood said.
The 2008 convocation in Atlanta will build on the theme of the North American Baptist Covenant. Leaders expect about 20,000 people to attend the convocation, which will feature sermons and testimonies on the themes Jesus outlined in the gospels, Jimmy Allen said. Allen was Southern Baptist Convention president in the late 1970s and is chair of the program-planning team.
Plenary sessions will address general issues, and breakout seminars will offer specific application ideas to solving and resolving the issues, Allen added.
Topics in the breakout sessions will include prophetic preaching, ecology, sexual exploitation, racism, religious liberty, poverty, HIV/AIDS, finding common ground with other faiths, public policy, youth, evangelism, stewardship and spiritual discipline.
“In the process, we will be looking at ways to network,” Allen said. “Every person who comes ought to be able to find some specific way to put their faith into action.”
Clinton said he hoped the meeting would become “a movement” among Baptists. He also offered his foundation’s resources to help participants become actively involved in the issues to be discussed in Atlanta.
“This is an attempt to answer: ‘What would our Christian witness require of us in the 21st century?’” Clinton said. “It is a part of our faith obligation. But it also is a part of our common life. … This is an important event in the history of Christianity—how faith should react on public life.”
William Shaw, president of the National Baptist Convention USA, Inc., a predominantly African-American group, echoed Clinton’s observations.
“One of the challenges this places before us as Baptists and as believers is to live up to our faith,” Shaw said. “God is moving to make faith real, addressing the issues we face in a non-political ways and non-partisan ways, but in prophetic ways. We look forward to this with tremendous celebration.”
T. DeWitt Smith, president of the Progressive National Baptist Convention, said the Old Testament prophet Micah is a guide for the 2008 convocation.
“If we say we love God, we will ‘do justice and love mercy,’” Smith said. “Lip service is fine, but we are looking for ways to put feet to our faith. It is possible to be together and differ on opinions.”
The convocation will move Baptists forward, Carter stressed.
“Our goals are completely positive … and all-inclusive,” he said. “We call on all Baptists who share these goals to join with us.”
Conspicuously absent from the gathering were representatives of the 16-million member Southern Baptist Convention, the largest single Baptist body in the world. Although SBC leaders were not invited to the Atlanta meeting, Carter and Clinton said they could join in the movement.
For years, some fundamentalist and independent Baptists have shunned such cooperative ventures for fear of theological compromise and loss of independence. Southern Baptists recently withdrew from the Baptist World Alliance and its North American Baptist Fellowship because of alleged liberalism—a charge the broader Baptist organizations denied.
SBC officials were not invited because the North American Baptist Fellowship’s membership provided the core of the Carter Center gathering, Underwood said. “But it’s important to say that a number of people here are Southern Baptists,” he added.
Carter noted Southern Baptist officials participated in meetings he initiated in the 1990s to try to reconcile Baptist factions.
And both Carter and Clinton said they were encouraged by the conciliatory tone struck by the new SBC president, Frank Page of Taylors, S.C.
“We’d be thrilled to have [Southern Baptists],” Clinton said.
“Our goal will be to extend an invitation to all Baptists,” Carter said.
Underwood emphasized that Carter and Clinton were not speaking in their capacity as political leaders or as Democrats, but as Baptist Christians. And they agreed that enlisting conservatives and Republicans will be important to the endeavor.
“We anticipate that there will be other Baptists who will participate in this endeavor who happen also to be Baptists but also happen to be Republicans,” Underwood said.
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