Ministers want Ohio to become ‘Political Sleaze-Free Zone’

Posted: 11/16/07

Ministers want Ohio to become
‘Political Sleaze-Free Zone’

By David Briggs

Religion News Service

CLEVELAND (RNS)—A coalition of Ohio religious leaders is asking for the battleground swing state to be a “Political Sleaze-Free Zone” for the 2008 election.

We Believe Ohio kicked off the campaign at rallies in Columbus and Cleveland, asking candidates and political parties to promote what they stand for and refrain from attack ads.

Organizers said they have more than 900 names on petitions urging politicians to bring dignity and civility to the political process. Gov. Ted Strickland supports the effort, according to the interfaith group.

The Columbus-based group asserted the 2004 and 2006 elections brought “gutter politics” to Ohio.

In their petition drive, the clergy ask participants in the upcoming election to reject “the politics of polarization,” and promote the common good by addressing issues such as poverty, jobs, education and health care.


News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




On the Move

Posted: 11/16/07

On the Move

Terry Johnston to Trinity Memorial Church in Marlin as associate pastor.

Jonathan Leftwich to Fel-lowship of Plum Creek in Kyle as associate pastor from First Church in Rockport, where he was youth minister.

Alan Morris to Paluxy Church in Paluxy as pastor.

Hal Mundine to First Church in Sinton as interim music director.

David Powell to Mambrino Church in Granbury as minister to youth.

Don Rainey to First Church in Petersburg as pastor from Westside Chapel of Possum Kingdom Lake.

Justin Southall to First Church in Lipan as minister to youth.

Koby Strawser to First Church in Barlett as minister of youth.

Mark Taylor to Hillcrest Church in Bryan as minister of music.

Clell Wright has resigned as music minister at Lytle South Church in Abilene.

George Yarbrough to First Church in Refugio as pastor, where he had been interim.


News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




New book probes poetry’s power to stir the soul

Posted: 11/16/07

New book probes poetry’s power to stir the soul

By Cecile S. Holmes

Religion News Service

CHICAGO (RNS)—Poetry is that unusual combination of words with the power to move, delight, nurture and transport readers beyond the here-and-now. It also can nourish our souls, according to the authors of a new book celebrating how poetry can kindle the spiritual in attentive readers.

“Poetry slows us down. It asks us to look—and look again. Poems have a way of reminding us we are part of something larger than ourselves,” said Judith Valente, co-author/editor of the new volume, Twenty Poems to Nourish Your Soul.

Valente, a Chicago-based on-air correspondent for the PBS show Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly and Chicago Public Radio, wrote the book with her husband, Charles Reynard, a judge of the 11th Judicial Circuit in central Illinois.

Their book represents both the chronicle of a deeply personal journey and an opening for others seeking a deeper connection to the divine. The 20 poems included are drawn mainly from modern American poets. Most are not overtly religious, nor are they the sort of poems usually found in anthologies of religious or spiritual poets.

Instead, the poems collected by Valente and Reynard lure readers into slow recognition of the divine presence, steeping them in identifying how mystery moves into life through poetry.

“Finding God by paying attention is the theme of this collection,” Valente writes in her introduction. “God isn’t mentioned by name very often in these poems, but God’s presence suffuses them.”

The poems are organized around 10 themes—attentiveness, gratitude, acceptance, simplicity, praise, work, loss, body and soul, mystery and prayer. To Valente and Reynard, each is a foundation stone for building a rich inner spiritual life.

Two poems are offered with each theme, along with a short commentary that is more invitation than exposition. Each explores why the poem is meaningful to Valente or to Reynard, and then suggests readers reflect on its meaning in their own lives.

In recent months, Reynard and Valente have been conducting workshops to help busy professionals learn how poems can become “soul friends” and pathways to solitude and deeper spirituality.

Poetry, Reynard says, is a “centering influence” in his life, a prayer from which he gains strength and balance.

“This work seems less and less different than my past and professional work,” he said. “Paying attention is important for me as a judge. Poetry is helping me to become a better judge because I am to recognize people by listening and watching more acutely.”



News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




Neurotheology opens doors for scientific study of belief

Posted: 11/16/07

(Art by Andrew Garcia Philips/The Star-Ledger)

Neurotheology opens doors
for scientific study of belief

Hannah Elliott

Associated Baptist Press

NEW YORK (ABP)—Some scientists say neurotheology—an emerging discipline that addresses the correlation between neurological and spiritual activity—proves God created the brain. Others claim “the brain created the god.”

At the root of the debate, some say, is the threat that faith could be reduced to nothing more than chemical reactions in the brain.

The coupling of science and belief has become increasingly prominent in popular media. Time and Newsweek magazines both have run long stories exploring the newly recognized discipline. And current studies at Wheaton College, Columbia University and the University of Pennsylvania are using neuro-imaging to locate brain regions activated during emotional or spiritual events.

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The quest is to find a neurological basis for out-of-body or enlightenment experiences, including trances, time perception, oneness with the universe and altered states of consciousness. But neurotheology also can help explain the more mundane habits of a religious life—prayer, beliefs, meditation and senses of the presence of the supernatural.

Paul Simmons, a clinical professor of family and community medicine at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, said the brain is intimately related to relationships with and perceptions of God. So, neurotheology is a good way to help theologians use all of their capacities to study God.

Simmons, a former pastor and ethics professor at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, insists the underlying question is whether that experience is “just a mental state, or have you gotten in touch with a transcendence?”

“Our brain is basic to all that we are, all that we understand, all that we perceive,” Simmons said. “We can’t avoid that in theology any longer. At least, we must be aware of the fact that many of our claims made about religion are actually based on science.”

Theories about correlations between the brain and beliefs are nothing new. Historians have speculated that figures like Joan of Arc, Saint Teresa of Avila, Fedor Dostoevsky and Marcel Proust had ailments like epilepsy, which in turn led to their obsessions with the spiritual world.

Beginning in the 1950s, scientists used electroencephalograms, or EEGs, to record electrical activity in the brain. By placing electrodes on the scalp, they could study brain waves concurring with elevated states of consciousness. In the 1980s, they stimulated different areas of the brain with a magnetic field, causing subjects to claim senses of ethereal presences in the room.

The first modern book published on the subject came in 1994. Called Neurotheology: Virtual Religion in the 21st Century, it was promoted in a theological journal called Zygon. And Newsweek recently citied a 1998 book—published by MIT Press, no less—called Zen and the Brain. Since then, scholarly journals have devoted issues to religion and the mind, including studies using data from meditating Buddhist monks and praying Franciscan nuns.

The reason for the renewed interest, according to neurotheology pioneer Brian Alston, is that the people writing about it have changed the terms of the field. This popular type of neurotheology focuses on beliefs, he said.

“In some ways, with neuroscience in pop culture, it sometimes seems more simple and basic than it really is,” said Alston, who is pursuing a doctorate in clinical psychology from Argosy University. “What bubbles up to the surface in culture may make it seem simple, but it’s not. It’s really complicated. … There’s still so much we don’t understand about the brain.”

Studies since the 1960s consistently have reported that between 30 percent and 40 percent of people have felt “very close to a powerful, spiritual force that seemed to lift you out of yourself,” Newsweek reported. According to the Gallup Poll, 53 percent of Americans say they have experienced a “sudden religious awakening or insight” at least once.

But has the fascination with the brain and belief come from an oversimplified version of neurotheology? Some have criticized Time’s article as equating science with Darwinism and religion with God—over-generalized definitions for such complex subjects.

“It’s oversimplified, but at the same time, there’s a large kernel of truth in there,” Simmons said. “The issue is whether a religious experience is a matter of brain circuits or God. Religiously inclined people will say, ‘Well, that’s God using our brain manifesting (itself) in brain activity.’“

Alston, who wrote What is Neurotheology?, said popular writing certainly has oversimplified the dialogue between science and theology. Theology does not just deal with the religious and the spiritual; it has much broader implications, he said.

Neurotheology should represent beliefs that are broader than just religious and spiritual, he added. It should represent cultural and political beliefs, as well.

“What neurotheology tries to do is say: ‘Look, here are ways that all this works together. Instead of seeing these things as enemies, let’s look at these as things that can relate,’“ he said.

Part of the issue, Alston added, is that, “in the Western world, we have created a dichotomy between what we consider to be physical and what we consider to be spiritual.”

That divide has been implicated in some of the criticisms of neurotheology. The key problem with neurotheology is its attempt to unify two strikingly different perspectives on human beings within one discipline, Alston wrote in a paper he presented to the American Psychological Association last year.

Massimo Pigliucci, a professor of ecology and evolution at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, has published essays questioning the discipline itself. In an essay titled “Neurotheology: A Rather Skeptical Perspective,” Pigliucci wrote he had two problems with neurotheology: “First, it is no theology at all. Theology is the study of the attributes of God. … The neurological study of what happens to the brain during mystical experiences cannot tell us anything about God because all we can do is to measure neural patterns.”

The other problem, Pigliucci wrote, is that it violates a basic rule of logic that what “can be done with fewer … is done in vain with more. That is, when faced with multiple hypotheses capable of explaining a given set of data, it is wise to start by considering the simplest ones, those that make the least unnecessary assumptions.”

That logic would leave God out of the equation.

Simmons called that criticism “on target.” Neurotheology doesn’t deal with theology as it traditionally is done—trying to get religion and experience together with reasonable consistency, he said. Progress in the field will come mostly in mental health, he said.

Alston, who studied ethics and philosophy at Yale Divinity School, says criticism of neurotheology depends on who is receiving the information. Much of it has to do with the difference between the physical brain and the metaphysical mind. Some experts believe ideas in the mind cause action, while others say chemicals in the brain cause action—and if chemicals are altered in the brain, behaviors will change, Alston said. Either way of thinking is OK, since neurotheologists aren’t interested in changing firmly held beliefs, he said.

“What I’m trying to do with neurotheology is to explain that each of these has a way with relating to the subject matter,” he said. “It once again depends on the standing point of a person in terms of if they’re a biologist and what their tools are and if they are a psychologist and what their tools are.”

And with the stakes so high in this new and complex discipline, there’s likely to be no shortage of opinions from either camp.





News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




Hospital chaplains minister in the workplace

Posted: 11/16/07

Hospital chaplains minister in the workplace

By Jessica Dooley

Communications Intern

HARLINGEN—The workplace can be tough for someone going through a crisis. To help employees cope with difficulties at work and at home, some South Texas employers have opened their doors to spirituality in the workplace, and hospital chaplains have new avenues of service.

Joe Perez

Chaplains from Valley Baptist Health Systems in Harlingen minister to several businesses in the area. They make rounds twice a month to banks, insurance companies, auto dealers and medical-related businesses.

“Businesses in the Valley and across the country are beginning to recognize that faith is a key component of reaching the heart of many employees,” said Joe Perez, vice president for pastoral services at Valley Baptist Health Systems said. “By affirming and addressing an employee’s spiritual needs, they will have more of the employee.”

Through Valley Baptist’s “Values Partners” program, businesses not only receive visits from chaplains, but also have access to licensed professional counselors and social workers—a distinction from most national chaplaincy programs.

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The chaplains’ mission is not to coerce or convert employees but to build relationships with employees by listening, praying and offering spiritual care in times of need.

“Chaplaincy is different than your local pastor coming out. A chaplain is broader. The role is not to lead but to walk with. It’s pastoral in nature,” Perez said.

Businesses in the area have found the program “very supportive” because it “builds trust in local business and provides a resource for times of struggle,” Perez added.

Most employees use chaplains when a family member or close friend is hospitalized. They ask if chaplains can visit their loved one in the hospital. When one business found out an employee had been murdered, the chaplains and counselors were there to provide support and debriefing sessions.

“Chaplains are good about going in the middle of trouble.” Perez said. “Sharing is therapeutic.”


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Consensus lacking on end-of-life issues

Posted: 11/16/07

Consensus lacking on end-of-life issues

By George Henson

Staff Writer

BROWNWOOD—When it comes to some of life’s hard questions, answers aren’t any easier for Christians than they are for other people—including questions concerning end-of-life issues.

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A universal consensus on topics such as euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide does not exist, said John Ferguson Jr., assistant professor of political science at Howard Payne University’s Douglas MacArthur Academy of Freedom and author of Point/Counterpoint: The Right to Die.

“There’s not one Christian view, and there’s not even just one Baptist view. A lot of Baptists differ in their views on the topic and where these lines of differing opinions should be drawn,” Ferguson said. “Some would argue that it is a very Christian thing to support a right to die if it will alleviate pain.”

As Ferguson points out in his book, however, the Southern Baptist Convention approved in 2001 a resolution castigating euthanasia. The strongly worded resolution read: “The messengers to the Southern Baptist Convention meeting … affirm our belief that every human life, including the life of the terminally ill, disabled or clinically depressed patient, is sacred and ought to be protected against unnecessary harm; and be it further resolved, that we find legalized euthanasia immoral ethically, unnecessary medically and unconscionable socially.”

Ferguson’s book, written primarily for a secular audience, tries to provide both sides of the argument—not supplying an answer, but offering the fuel necessary to power the engines of thought.

“I see a lot of students who are very interested in these topics, and they tend to have a very reflexive reaction because of the views they’ve heard from others. They haven’t given enough thought to these issues to make them their own,” Ferguson said.

As a teacher, he often thought of students while writing his book that offered divergent viewpoints.

“It’s a very personal situation, but a lot of undergrads who have never had to deal with a loved one in this situation have very stringent views. But if they have seen a loved one go through a lengthy or painful death process, they are more open to seeing other viewpoints,” he said.

The situation gets much more complicated when Christians are elected to office and start to make public policy based on their personal beliefs of what is right or wrong. Ferguson pointed to the machinations of the legislature and judicial bodies in the Terri Schiavo case as an example of how bad things can get.

When Christians become convinced they are right and all others are wrong in such cases, “it doesn’t show the gentler side of Christianity for those on either side of the issue,” he pointed out.

Ferguson discovered the difficulty of finding an easy answer as he researched the subject before he wrote his book.

“I criticize students for not seeing more than one viewpoint, but this is one subject I hadn’t thought very deeply about. I discovered that this is a question where there are no quick, easy answers,” he said.

He doesn’t posit one viewpoint as better concerning the right to die in the book and will not now. But he reached one conclusion while writing the book: It’s important to put into writing one’s wishes concerning whether to continue life when there is little hope for recovery—and do it long before a crisis occurs.

“The problems that arise in this area are because people don’t think about it in advance, and it puts tremendous burdens on families and divides families as they try to choose their course,” Ferguson said. “Everyone needs to have written instructions for their family to follow.”

Ferguson also advised churches to be careful dealing with right-to-life issues in Sunday school lessons and sermons.

“The church is to be a place of healing, and these right-to-life Sundays can be very divisive and hurtful to families who have had to make very difficult decisions,” he said.




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Have we gone too far in the race for parenthood?

Posted: 11/16/07

Have we gone too far
in the race for parenthood?

By Hannah Elliott

Associated Baptist Press

NEW YORK (ABP)—In Brazil, a 51-year-old woman gave birth to her own twin grandchildren. She used embryos from her 27-year-old daughter, who had tried for four years to conceive.

In January, a Texas-based “human embryo bank” announced prospective parents could choose pre-created embryos based on photos, family histories and medical reports of the people who donated the sperm and eggs.

Many conservative evangelicals say fertility clinics have crossed the line and started “playing God” in the race for parenthood.

And some career-minded young women have frozen their eggs to use them later in life when they are established professionally but when middle age may prevent them from conceiving the old-fashioned way.

They’re all choices made with the help of science for one goal: To have children. But how far is too far in the race for parenthood?

Many conservative evangelicals say fertility clinics have long since crossed the line and started “playing God.”

Southern Baptist heavyweights have condemned embryonic stem cell research as a “sad and pathetic” assault on human dignity. And most Christian scholars say having children at any cost is not biblical.

But as medical journals report infertility has reached epidemic proportions, the race to “cure” it continues to accelerate.

Medical professionals define infertility as the inability to conceive after one year of unprotected sex, although—since the success rate of conceiving in a normal cycle is only 16 percent—as many as 10 percent of otherwise fertile couples also are unable to conceive in the first year.

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Environmental toxins, sexually transmitted diseases, abortion, stress, cancer and certain chemicals or medications all are known causes of the condition, which affects 3.5 million couples nationwide.

How to regulate the nation’s 400 fertility clinics is a debate in itself, and laws vary by state. Federal law mandates labs analyzing semen obey quality control and training standards set in 1988, but labs handling eggs are exempt from those standards.

Many fertility doctors say it’s condescending to assume the government must protect women seeking to conceive. On the contrary, they say, women often volunteer for even experimental research if they believe it could produce children.

But Christian infertility support groups say professional and ethical standards are easily ignored at fertility clinics. Ethicists say context determines a lot.

“No clear ethical line exists when it comes to fertility treatments,” said Jonathan Tran, a Baylor University ethics professor. “Rather than ethics not being able to keep up with technology, it’s more the case that technology creates its own ethics.”

The most prevalent assisted reproductive technologies are in vitro fertilization, artificial insemination, and gamete donation. IVF is the most popular, with more than 1,000 women undergoing the procedure each week, according to the Washington Post.

During IVF, the woman injects herself with hormones to induce egg production. The eggs are retrieved from her uterus, fertilized in a lab and the most viable of them returned. Success rates for each attempt vary from 25 and 50 percent, with costs ranging from $4,000 to $20,000 for each try.

As director of the National Embryo Donation Center, Jeffrey Keenan warns his patients that fertility treatments can cause multiple pregnancies, and some doctors advise “selective reduction” of the embryos. Not all embryos survive the thaw after storage, and mothers must be ready to determine the fate of unused embryos, he adds.

More than 400,000 unused embryos exist in fertility clinics nationwide—a major point of contention for groups critical of IVF. Most of the embryos are under the control of those who donated them and still are trying to create a family.

Embryo adoption in particular has become a much talked-about solution for what to do with unused embryos. Congress has devoted more than $3 million to promote “embryo adoption,” but fewer than 100 babies have been born using the method.

Proponents like the Snowflakes Frozen Embryo Adoption Program and Embryos Alive say embryo adoption presents an ethical solution for saving what they call “snowflake children.” Critics say the adoptions aren’t legal and could create a market for frozen human embryos.

In a Boston Globe column, Susan Crockin, a reproduction and adoption lawyer, said that forcing “adoption frameworks” onto frozen embryos elevates one religious doctrine—conservative Christianity—over others.

“Changing the vocabulary to blur the distinction between four- to eight-cell embryos and born children—by naively or intentionally using terms like ‘embryo adoption,’ ‘pre-born children’ or ‘microscopic Americans’ and those who create them ‘parents’—is not only legally wrong, but … bad public policy,” she wrote.

Stephen Grabill, a theologian at the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty, also is wary of embryo adoption, albeit from a different perspective.

“At this point, what is the relevant moral difference between (IVF) and embryo adoption?” he asked. “Have the embryos lost in unsuccessful thawing and transfer attempts been treated properly as individually unique and personal beings created in God’s image? Can any form of technology that instrumentalizes life, regardless of the ultimate use to which it is put, be morally satisfying?”

Parental age limits pose another ethical dilemma for the $3-billion fertility industry. Is it fair for a child to be born to a 50-year-old mother who may not live to see her graduate from college?

Keenan, who is Catholic, said he doesn’t pursue infertility options for women older than 45 or for couples whose combined age is more than 100.

Catholics like Keenan and Orthodox Jewish groups long have been the most influential and consistent voices in the debate about infertility. Many view sex as a natural act in marital life, the overflow of which is children.

Similarly, many evangelicals believe the “unitive” function of marriage should remain connected to its procreative function.

“What it does is it violates the integrity of marriage,” Tran said. “Marriage by its nature binds two people together.”

Michele Shoun of Baptists for Life agreed.

“Using donated sperm does seem to violate the sanctity of marriage,” she said via e-mail. “When a couple marries, they accept one another for better or worse, in sickness and in health. Using donated sperm bypasses the seriousness of the vow.”

What’s more, Tran said, the use of medical procedures to select gender or eye color, for example, profoundly changes the doctor-patient relationship.

“Now the context of medical practice is fundamentally one of capitalism,” Tran said. “Doctors and patients have entered a consumer-provider relationship where the consumer should be able to buy whatever they want.

“It turns into a really bizarre world in which you’re basically picking an egg donor in the same way that our graduate program would choose who to accept.”

A counterbalance to that “bizarre world” should be the church, which has so far failed to teach Christians what the Bible says about infertility, Tran said.

The New Testament themes of the church as God’s family and of Gentiles’ adoption into that family demonstrate that childlessness is not a sign of disfavor from God, he said. In fact, the desire to bequeath genetic traits and a surname through bloodlines has pagan—not early Christian—origins, he added.

“Adoption is the primary metaphor for our relationship with God,” Tran said. “Gentiles are in there by adoption. That should give us pause.”



News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




Ethicists in quandary over surrogacy

Posted: 11/16/07

Ethicists in quandary over surrogacy

By Hannah Elliott

Associated Baptist Press

NEW YORK (ABP)—The Church of England recently issued a statement identifying organ donation—even by living donors—as a Christian duty motivated by compassion and a mandate to heal. But what about donating a womb for nine months?

Surrogacy—when a woman agrees to gestate and give birth to a child for others to raise—has ethicists, religious scholars, scientists and even feminists pondering the ramifications of such an arrangement.

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Most agree procreation is a privilege, not a fundamental human right. But consensus on what should happen legally, morally and physically after procreation is years—if not decades—away.

Jonathan Tran

Jonathan Tran, an assistant professor of ethics at Baylor University, believes while most couples may agree it is a privilege to bear children, they’re willing to pay—or do—just about anything for that privilege. That’s where the ethical dilemmas come in.

“It’s a result of capitalist notions of entitlement,” Tran said. “Doctors simply become practitioners using those technologies to give the consumer whatever they want.”

Inevitably, the question of who should bear children—and by what methods—remains deeply divisive.

Traditional surrogacy combines a surrogate’s egg with the biological father’s sperm, but embryo transfer surrogacy is increasingly common, which uses an embryo created from gametes of both biological parents. The first American baby conceived via such an arrangement was born in 1986.

Groups like Baptists for Life and the National Council for Adoption do not support surrogacy; others especially are opposed when it is used to produce children for homosexual couples. Most Catholic leaders, staunch in their objection to procreation that doesn’t involve sex, also have spoken against the practice.

“I just can’t go along with surrogacy,” said Jeffrey Keenan, director of the National Embryo Donation Center and longtime reproductive specialist. “It just sounds to me to be a bad idea for a woman to carry a pregnancy and then give it up, even though she enters into it with that forethought and knowledge. I don’t agree with surrogacy myself and certainly don’t advise it.”

Some ethicists, especially on Catholic and evangelical fronts, say that—at best—surrogacy undermines the intimacy of marriage. At worst, they say, it’s tantamount to adultery.

Keenan, who is Catholic, said the idea of “an additional party in the marital relationship” can be harmful to an otherwise strong marriage. Others say separating the act of sex from actually conceiving children causes frustration, confusion and isolation between spouses.

“Essentially, it makes marriage a type of business partnership where having sex or not having sex becomes a project for the couple,” Tran said.

Perhaps surprisingly, Catholics, evangelicals and feminists agree on one aspect of surrogacy: It has the potential to dehumanize, or even enslave, women. These critics say splitting half-siblings and “selling” babies should be banned. They say it is paternalistic for rich people to buy the rights to a low-income surrogate’s womb—that if an hourly rate is computed for her pregnancy, she earns much less than minimum wage.

While it is illegal in the United States to sell human eggs, most surrogate mothers make thousands of dollars for their peripheral troubles. Nationwide, the going rate hovers around $20,000 to carry one child, plus $5,000 per additional child. The amount doesn’t include legal fees, doctor bills, medications or incidental expenses like maternity clothes.

Michele Shoun of Baptists for Life said she would not go so far as to characterize surrogacy as “slavery,” but the fact that it’s a paid service means it’s not a celebration of life, either.

“It’s a transaction in which a child is bought and sold, and there are many problems with that,” she said via email. “It’s also one more symptom of ‘freedom of choice’—a dubious proposition if ever there was one.”

Fertility clinics receive no government funding and therefore are under no federal oversight, although Congress recently passed a law that requires them to start collecting some data on clients. Still, Shoun and others say, questionable ethical practices—by doctors trying to give women the best odds of getting pregnant—can be prevalent.

Couples believe they can control fertility procedures so “nothing outside the bounds is done, but I have a hard time trusting the fertility clinics,” Shoun said. “Much of fertility assistance is tainted.”

State laws vary when it comes to surrogacy. New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon and Washington allow surrogacy. Laws in Nevada, New Hampshire, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and Virginia permit surrogacy for married couples only. Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Nebraska, New York and North Dakota technically prohibit surrogacy agreements—but loopholes exist. Michigan law prohibits compensated surrogacy. It is legally unclear whether surrogacy is permitted in Maryland, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Wisconsin. For all other states, no legal provision exists for or against surrogacy.

In states that allow surrogacy, contracts define parenthood, adoption, visitation rights and anonymity clauses. Lawyers help parents predetermine what happens in the event of a miscarriage, whether to “selectively reduce” embryos if a large number of them become viable in the uterus, and what to do if the fetus develops a birth defect and neither the surrogate nor the biological parent wants the child.

What is more, advocate groups like Resolve argue governments should not interfere with the veritable “wild west” frontier of surrogate parenting. They say banning it could create an underworld market much worse than the existing system.

Surrogate mothers themselves say surrogacy gives them a sense of confidence and fulfillment in doing a humanitarian act.

A three-year study of 200 potential surrogates applying to The Surrogate Mother Program of New York seemed to back the claim that “although money is a motive for many surrogates, it is not their primary motive.”

“Almost all (surrogates) report a variety of emotional reasons for undertaking surrogacy, and many of these can be grouped together under the heading of wishes to enable parenthood, to feel self-actualized, and to enhance their identity,” Betsy Aigen, founder of Childbirth Consultation Services, wrote in the study overview.

“It is, for these women, a particularly female experience related to the experiences and meaning of biological functioning and motherhood.”

The 1996 study found that, contrary to popular perceptions that surrogate mothers are uneducated, rural and poor, the average is Caucasian with decent education and income.

“Most of them are parents who know what the experience of bearing a child is about,” Aigen wrote. “There is nothing to indicate that they are naive, passive dupes who are desperate and susceptible to exploitation.

“Being a surrogate is a life experience that allows some women real success in altering their emotional state in a direction they desire and fulfilling ideal images of themselves.”

At its heart, the debate may indeed be primarily about the definition of true motherhood and personal fulfillment for woman.

And while science continues to present new options in the quest for parenthood, the progress is a testament to what some see as God-given intellect and ingenuity. Even some conservative ethicists are asking, “If we have the proper technology, why not use it?”

It may take a generation or two to find out.




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Senate probes finances of six TV ministries

Posted: 11/16/07

Senate probes finances of six TV ministries

By Adelle M. Banks

Religion News Service

WASHINGTON (RNS)—A prominent U.S. senator is seeking financial information from some of the biggest names among evangelical TV ministries following complaints from the public and news reports of possible money mismanagement.

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, the top-ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, gave the six ministries until Dec. 6 to turn over the records.

“The allegations involve governing boards that aren’t independent and allow generous salaries and housing allowances and amenities such as private jets and Rolls Royces,” Grassley said.

The senator sent letters to two Texas-based ministries—Kenneth Copeland Ministries of Newark and Benny Hinn Ministries in Grapevine. He also demanded financial accounting from Joyce Meyer Ministries in Fenton, Mo.; Bishop Eddie Long of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Lithonia, Ga.; Creflo Dollar Ministries in College Park, Ga.; and Randy and Paula White of Tampa, Fla.

Ken Behr, president of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability, called the re-quest “quite unusual” and “almost unprecedented.” He said none of the six ministries targeted are members of his Winchester, Va., organization, but he expects it will prompt others to get their houses in order.

“I think it’s a wake-up call for everybody that financial accountability, transparency (and) proper accounting processes are important,” Behr said.

The Whites, who recently divorced, acknowledged in a statement they had received the letter.

“We find it unusual, since the IRS has separate powers to investigate religious organizations if they think it’s necessary,” they said. “So we find it odd that the IRS did not initiate this investigation.”

Meyer’s ministry posted a statement on its website, saying: “Joyce Meyer Ministries is committed to financial transparency. We are diligently working on the presented requests and will continue to take the necessary steps to maintain our financial integrity.”

Long’s ministry also issued a statement saying he intends to “fully comply” with the request. “New Birth has several safeguards put in place to insure all transactions are in compliance with laws applicable to churches.” Responses from other ministries could not be immediately obtained.

Information requested by Grassley included:

• Audited financial statements from 2004-2006.

• Names and addresses of board members.

• Detailed explanations of compensation paid to ministry leaders.

• Payments to ministry leaders not reported as income to the Internal Revenue Service on Forms W-2 and 1099.

• Statements for credit cards used by ministry leaders for ex-penses paid by their ministries.

• Lists of vehicles owned or leased by ministries for the benefit of their leaders.


News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




Texas Tidbits

Posted: 11/16/07

Texas Tidbits

WMU Foundation names Texans to leadership roles. Patsy Meier, a former medical missionary to Nigeria and member of First Baptist Church in El Paso, was elected to the Woman’s Missionary Union Foundation board of trustees. Trustees elected James Westbrook, a layman from First Baptist Church of Richardson, as vice chairman. Other Texas Baptists on the board are Sylvia DeLoach and Joy Fenner, both from Garland.


Baylor ER expansion campaign raises $11 million. The Baylor Health Care System Foundation announced it has raised more than $11 million to help fund the expansion of the Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas emergency department. The building project will expand the emergency department to 78,000 square-feet and increase the hospital’s capacity to treat patients requiring trauma care.


Baylor regents OK new centers. Baylor University’s board of regents approved creation of an Academy for Teaching and Learning and the Keston Center for Religion, Politics & Society. The academy will promote scholarship in teaching and learning through research in interdisciplinary teaching environments and learning outcomes measurement, and it will create additional avenues to integrate faith and learning. The Keston Center at Baylor will provide students and faculty—as well as scholars from other institutions—access to a comprehensive collection of books and research materials related to religious persecution under communism. This past summer, Baylor acquired the complete archive and library of Oxford’s Keston Institute, the primary organization involved in monitoring and documenting religious affairs in the communist world during the Soviet period.


Young named BCFS division’s senior executive director. Jim Young, former prison chaplain and pastor who served more than seven years as director of community ministries for the Baptist General Convention of Texas, has been named to the newly created position of senior executive director of the health and human services division at Baptist Child & Family Services. Young will oversee a system of 25 social service ministries in Texas. He is a graduate of Texas A&M University and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.


Royal Ambassadors seek memorabilia for centennial. The Royal Ambassadors missions organization marks its 100th anniversary next May, and Texas Baptist Men is seeking to record its history. Keith Mack, state director for RAs and Challengers, wants to collect copies of old photos and other memorabilia that can be displayed during the centennial observance. He also hopes to discover the oldest living former RA in Texas and the first church in Texas with an RA chapter, as well as record memories of RAs from its early years. Contact Mack at (214) 828-5354, keith.mack@bgct.org or keith.mack@texasbaptistmen.org.


Correction. Two photos in the Nov. 5 print edition of the Baptist Standard were incorrectly credited to the wrong photographer. The photographs of Gary Morgan on page 2 and Bob Fowler on page 8 were by Eric Guel.


News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




TOGETHER: Reflection rightly leads to thanksgiving

Posted: 11/16/07

TOGETHER:
Reflection rightly leads to thanksgiving

The celebration of Thanksgiving Day is not, strictly speaking, a religious holiday, such as Christmas and Easter. But this holiday taps into some of the deepest spiritual emotions a human being can feel.

There is no emotion more powerful in convincing the heart and mind of the reality of God than the sense of gratitude that wells up in the heart when we feel warmly blessed and embraced by goodness.

wademug
Executive Director
BGCT Executive Board

More than one father has stood in speechless wonder as his new baby has been placed in his arms and suddenly been overwhelmed by a sense of gratitude. And after you express joyful thanks to your dear wife and appreciation to others, there are still emotions of amazement and gratitude that can only be directed to God.

When one looks into the night sky or marvels at the beauty of a breathtaking view, we are drawn into a contemplation of the mystery of creation, and we breathe a prayer of thanksgiving, almost involuntarily, to the God who brought such beauty into being.

There always is plenty to complain about, but a little time of reflection, of being quiet in the presence of God, almost always draws from us thanksgiving rather than complaint.

We are brought to our knees in humility when we hear people who have sustained great loss and known great grief speak with conviction about their gratitude to God for how he has seen them through the trials and sustained them as they face an uncertain future.

I felt gratitude last week as Phil Strickland was honored posthumously by the T.B. Maston Foundation with its Christian Ethics Award. No person has done more to help our convention speak clearly and effectively in the public square regarding moral and ethical issues than Phil. I gave thanks to God for Phil’s deep passion for prayer and for doing the will of God, for being obedient as God led him to speak truth to power and to advocate on behalf of children and families.

Rosemary and I were back at our alma mater, Oklahoma Baptist University, for our 45th class reunion last weekend. The Bison Glee Club celebrated its 70th anniversary and the alumni gathered in honor of the legendary Dean Warren Angell, who founded the Glee Club. As you might imagine, the music was varied, interesting, and lovingly and masterfully performed.

Several of our Texas Baptist ministers of music were trained by Dean Angell and were there to sing in the concert. They sang a black spiritual that prepared me for this year’s thanksgiving season: “My Lord taught me to rise up. And I ain’t going to let him down!”

Then they lifted their voices to sing: “O Love That Will Not Let Me Go.” Sing these lines with me as we get ready for Thanksgiving: “I trace the rainbow through the rain, and feel the promise is not vain that morn shall tearless be.”

As the hymn “O Sacred Head, Now Wounded” states, “Lord, let me never, never outlive my love to Thee.”

We are loved.


Charles Wade is executive director of the Baptist General Convention of Texas Executive Board.




News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Baptist churches, in Texas, the BGCT, the nation and around the world.




Storylist for 11/19/07 issue

Storylist for week of 11/19/07

TAKE ME TO: Top Story |  Texas |  Opinion |  Baptists |  Faith & Culture |  Book Reviews |  Classifieds  |  Departments  |  Bible Study





Have we gone too far in the race for parenthood?


No executive director nominee likely before year's end

Churches, volunteer receive LifeCall missions recognition

Couple offers hard-to-place children a family where everyone fits right in

New book probes poetry's power to stir the soul

Singer/songwriter shares life story through music

On the Move

Around the State

Texas Tidbits

Bioethics in Science and Medicine
Have we gone too far in the race for parenthood?

Neurotheology opens doors for scientific study of belief

Consesus lacking on end-of-life issues

Ethicists in quandary over surrogacy

Hospital chaplains minister in the workplace


N.C. Baptists expel gay-affirming Charlotte church

Baptist Briefs


It's a bird, it's a plane, it's …a superhero in a burqa?

Senate probes finances of six TV ministries

Ministers want Ohio to become ‘Political Sleaze-Free Zone'

D.C. congregation gives homeless a ride to church

Christian leaders urge compassion in debate regarding immigration

JEZEBEL: Did the Bible's bad girl get a bad rap?

Faith Digest


Book Reviews


Texas Baptist Forum

Classified Ads

Cartoon

Around the State

On the Move


EDITORIAL: Differences, defamation & grace

DOWN HOME: Agnostic & editor agree on thanks

2nd Opinion: A young Baptist's reason to remain

Texas Baptist Forum

RIGHT or WRONG? Stuffing the temple

TOGETHER: Reflection rightly leads to thanksgiving



BaptistWay Bible Series for November 18: Live like this

Bible Studies for Life Series for November 18: 20/20 vision

Explore the Bible Series for November18: Show compassion and love to those in need

BaptistWay Bible Series for November 25: Welcome Christians with whom you disagree

Bible Studies for Life Series for November 25: Make up your minds

Explore the Bible Series for November25: On mission

Previously Posted:
Former pastor returns money to congregation; church agrees to give funds to BGCT

Arkansas Baptists narrowly reject opening on communion, baptism

Belmont and Tennessee Baptists reach settlement, end lawsuit

Nigeria mission trip takes volunteer far outside her comfort zone

Buckner volunteers help Valley woman receive dying wish

Laura Bush affirms faith-based youth programs

IMB attorney says board has power to suspend Burleson

IMB trustees censure Burleson, bar him from board activities

TBM mobilizes disaster relief team to meet needs in southern Mexico

Survey reveals lack of knowledge about First Amendment

Missouri convention rejects candidates backed by fundamentalist group

Foreclosure narrowly averted on former Windermere acreage

BWA leader urges U.S. Baptists to cooperate

Convention Wrapup: First woman BGCT president elected, budget approved



See articles from the previous 11/05/07 issue here.