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Calvinism report 9 months in process


NASHVILLE (BP) — A 19-member advisory team on Calvinism, in concluding nine months of work, has issued its seven-page report, “Truth, Trust, and Testimony in a Time of Tension.”

The advisory team — “not an official committee” of the convention — was assembled by Frank S. Page, president of the SBC Executive Committee, in August 2012 to craft a statement outlining “a strategy whereby people of various theological persuasions can purposely work together in missions and evangelism.”

In the weeks leading up to the 2012 SBC annual meeting in New Orleans, LifeWay Research released a study that showed nearly equal numbers of pastors in the SBC consider their churches as Calvinist/Reformed as do Arminian/Wesleyan, and that more than 60 percent were somewhat or strongly concerned about the effect of Calvinism in the Southern Baptist family.

During his presidential address, then-SBC President Bryant Wright called the tension between “traditional” Southern Baptists and “Calvinists” the “elephant in the room.” Wright said he was concerned that Christ-centered, Bible-believing Southern Baptists will be so engaged in correcting one another’s theological views when it comes to election and salvation that they will be detracted from their mission of evangelizing the lost.

“These two views on election and salvation can coexist as long as we stay Christ-centered and biblically based in our theology,” Wright said.

Page also addressed Calvinism during the Executive Committee report at the 2012 SBC annual meeting.

“Friends, I’m concerned because there seems to be some non-Calvinists who are more concerned about rooting out Calvinists than they are about winning the lost for Christ,” Page said. Some Calvinists, he said, “seem to think that if we do not believe the same thing about soteriology that they believe somehow we are less intelligent or ignorant at best.”

“I simply say to you today that it’s time to realize that a Great Commission advance needs everyone,” Page said. “Calvinists and non-Calvinists have worked together for decade upon decade upon decade in this convention.”

As part of his report, Page announced his plan to assemble a group of advisers to help chart a way through the division surrounding Calvinism, pledging that the group’s function would not include revising the Baptist Faith and Message, Southern Baptists’ statement of beliefs.

“I do believe we can find some ways to work together better, and I believe that the leaders of both of these groups can come together to say, ‘Here’s how we can return to working together like once we did,'” Page said.

Meeting Together

Page enlisted longtime Southern Baptist educator David S. Dockery, president of Union University in Jackson, Tenn., to chair the advisory team.

The advisory team met as a full body twice –- Aug. 29–30 and Nov. 6 — and conducted extensive email and phone conversations during the first half of 2013. Members were responsible to provide their own funding for the meetings.

Following the first meeting, Page issued an interim statement.

“My goal for this initial meeting was not to argue theology or to try to change each other’s minds,” Page said. “It was to listen, to learn and to hope. My hope is that we as a diverse body of Baptists can agree to a genuine, joint acceptance of Great Commission responsibility.

“We must reclaim the principle of respect in our dealings with others. A common theme around the table is that we need to stop the exaggerations and caricatures of those whose perspective on the extent of the atonement is different from ours. We must avoid the twin ditches of anger and arrogance that threaten to pull us off the road of cooperation.”

Noting that he was “greatly heartened” by the “civil tone that marked the meeting,” he characterized the room as “permeated with a spirit of reverence for the Lord and shared passion for the preaching of the Gospel and witnessing to the lost in our own nation and around the world” despite the vastly different “personalities and theological positions represented.”

Following the second meeting, a small writing team corresponded back and forth and held one additional meeting to pull together a draft report that was circulated to the members at various stages of completion. A final draft was approved by the entire committee via email response in mid-May.

An Evangelistic Goal

From the beginning, Page’s goal for the group was consistent.

“I want to see men and women, boys and girls won to Christ. This is my overriding concern. I think unity helps do that,” Page said.

“My hope is that this group will help us identify areas of agreement and disagreement in Southern Baptist life concerning how God’s redemptive purposes are achieved through Christ. Once these are more clearly identified, we hope to develop some positive strategies that will enhance our ability to work together for the proclamation of the Gospel and the fulfillment of the Great Commission.

“Satan delights when he is able to divide and conquer,” Page said. “On the other hand, our Lord is honored when His prayer for us is fulfilled: ‘May they all be one, as You, Father, are in Me and I am in You. May they also be one in Us, so the world may believe You sent Me’ (John 17:21). I believe our unity — or lack thereof — affects our evangelism. The ultimate goal in my mind is that we work together in such a way that more people are won to faith in Christ.

“I truly believe that if we reclaim the principles of respect, honesty, trust and Christ-like selflessness in our dealings with one another, our brightest days of Kingdom advance are still before us,” Page said.

In addition to Dockery, other advisory team members, in alphabetical order, were:

— Daniel Akin, president, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, Wake Forest, North Carolina.

— David Allen, dean, school of theology at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Fort Worth, Texas.

— Tom Ascol, pastor, Grace Baptist Church, Cape Coral, Fla.

— Mark Dever, senior pastor, Capitol Hill Baptist Church, Washington, D.C.

— Leo Endel, executive director, Minnesota-Wisconsin Baptist Convention, Rochester, Minn.

— Ken Fentress, senior pastor, Montrose Baptist Church, Rockville, Md.

— Timothy George, dean, Beeson Divinity School, Birmingham, Ala.

— Eric Hankins, senior pastor, First Baptist Church, Oxford, Miss.

— Johnny Hunt, pastor, First Baptist Church, Woodstock, Ga.

— David Landrith, senior pastor, Long Hollow Baptist Church, Hendersonville, Tenn.

— Tammi Ledbetter, homemaker and journalist, member of Inglewood Baptist Church, Grand Prairie, Texas.

— Steve Lemke, provost and director of the Baptist Center for Theology and Ministry, New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.

— Fred Luter, president of the Southern Baptist Convention and senior pastor, Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, New Orleans.

— R. Albert Mohler Jr., president, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, Ky.

— Paige Patterson, president, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Fort Worth, Texas.

— Stephen Rummage, senior pastor, Bell Shoals Baptist Church, Brandon, Fla.

— Daniel Sanchez, professor of missions, associate dean and director of the Scarborough Institute of Church Planting & Growth, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

— Jimmy Scroggins, senior pastor, First Baptist Church, West Palm Beach, Fla.
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Roger S. (Sing) Oldham is vice president for convention communications and relations for the SBC Executive Committee. This article first was published by SBC LIFE, the Executive Committee’s journal.

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  • Roger S. Oldham