nrvalleytime
Member
So the Sourern Baptist Convention passed a resolution today condemning the Alt-Right movement in all its forms. You might think that a Christian church organization passing something like this should be standard.
And you're right.
But the SBC has historically had a history of racial segregation, going back as far as its inception. It was founded by pro-slavery pastors, and it took over a hundred years for the denomination to denounce the KKK. Today's vote in response to a new, unbridled, and openly racist movement is encouraging. Christianity has to be better, and this is one very small step. Pastors will be left with the responsibility to uncover and expose this group in their churches, so much work is left to be done. But small steps have to happen before change.
Full amendment text here.
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ne...-vote-resolution-against-alt-right-sbc17.html
And you're right.
But the SBC has historically had a history of racial segregation, going back as far as its inception. It was founded by pro-slavery pastors, and it took over a hundred years for the denomination to denounce the KKK. Today's vote in response to a new, unbridled, and openly racist movement is encouraging. Christianity has to be better, and this is one very small step. Pastors will be left with the responsibility to uncover and expose this group in their churches, so much work is left to be done. But small steps have to happen before change.
Full amendment text here.
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ne...-vote-resolution-against-alt-right-sbc17.html
The most-talked-about resolution at this year's annual meeting of Southern Baptists initially didn't even make it to the floor. But after some late-night scrambling the night before, about 5,000 denominational leaders voted Wednesday to explicitly condemn the alt-right movement.
For years, Southern Baptists have grappled with their denomination's past history of racism, and continue to work towards racial reconciliation. Failing to take the chance to condemn white supremacy could imply to outsiders—and the growing non-white minority within the SBC—that America's largest Protestant group won't speak out against the racists of today.
When attendees realized yesterday that a committee had declined to hear the proposed alt-right resolution—one of several being considered at the meeting—they gathered after-hours to vote to reintroduce the issue this afternoon. Moore said that from the platform, he couldn't see a single voting card opposed to bringing the alt-right resolution to the floor. On Wednesday afternoon, the measure passed.
It states: ”Racism and white supremacy are, sadly, not extinct but present all over the world in various white supremacist movements, sometimes known as ‘white nationalism' or ‘alt-right.' The messengers to the Southern Baptist Convention ... decry every form of racism, including alt-right white supremacy, as antithetical to the gospel of Jesus Christ.... We denounce and repudiate white supremacy and every form of racial and ethnic hatred as of the devil."