They're America's
other Baptists--the ones who appoint women pastors,
work with theological liberals, and line up more
closely with former president Jimmy Carter than with
President George W. Bush. Over the last 25 years, they
have watched with growing concern as their conservative
Southern Baptist brethren came to define the religious
tradition for the general public. Now these other
Baptists, who are spread among many different
denominations, are slowly pooling resources on humanitarian
work and evangelism, hoping they can have a bigger
impact.
On Friday in
Washington, D.C., two of the larger groups, the
American Baptist Churches and the Cooperative Baptist
Fellowship, are worshipping together for the first
time. They are commissioning two missionary couples
who will represent both groups and are organizing a
national Islamic-Baptist dialogue to improve relations with
Muslims.
''It is an effort
to celebrate our common heritages as Baptist Christians
and to affirm our commitment to work together more
collaboratively,'' said the Reverend Daniel Vestal,
national coordinator of the Cooperative Baptist
Fellowship. ''The Baptist witness is much richer and more
nuanced than is characterized so often in the public
square now.''
In January an
even broader group of Baptists will host an Atlanta meeting
''to speak and work together to create an authentic and
genuine prophetic Baptist voice in these complex
times,'' according to a joint document they issued
called a ''North American Baptist Covenant.'' The covenant
grew out of meetings of Baptist leaders organized by Carter,
a longtime Bible teacher who severed ties in 2000 with
the Southern Baptist Convention because of what he
called its ''increasingly rigid'' creed.
At 16.3 million
members, the Southern Baptist Convention is the largest
Protestant denomination in the country. However, millions of
other Baptists nationwide have churches that are
either independent or affiliated with smaller
groups.The Reverend Frank Page, the Southern Baptist
president, has accused the covenant's drafters of promoting
a ''left-wing liberal agenda that seeks to deny the
greatest need in our world, that being that the lost
be shown the way to eternal life through Jesus
Christ.''
But organizers
insist they do not want to create a new denomination or a
political platform. Bill Underwood, president of Mercer
University in Atlanta, and one of the main organizers
of next year's meeting, said he hasn't heard ''any
discussion one way or another'' about whether any
presidential candidates will be allowed to speak at the
assembly. Former president Bill Clinton, also a
Southern Baptist, is a supporter of the meeting.
The religious
leaders who endorsed the covenant say their churches span a
wide range of beliefs on issues both theological and
political, and have diverse styles of worship. Many
oppose abortion and same-sex marriage but believe that
the Bible's social justice teachings are just as important.
The unity meetings also aim to bridge the divide between
historically African-American and white Baptist
churches. ''We really haven't seen this kind of unity
in Baptist life since the early 19th century,''
Underwood said. ''The more we talk to one another, the more
we realize that despite some differences we have on
matters of theology, we can focus on the common
ground.'' The National Baptist Convention USA Inc. and
the Progressive National Baptist Convention--both
predominantly black and heavily involved in the civil
rights movement--are among the participants.
''I think it is
possible for denominations not to be predominantly one
racial ethnic group or another, but it's always hard work,''
said the Reverend Roy Medley, general secretary for
the American Baptists, one of the rare U.S.
denominations that aren't dominated by a single ethnic
group. ''Race is still the underlying great divide in our
country. ''The American Baptist Church, with about 1.2
million members, has about 5,500 congregations
nationwide, concentrated more in northern states. The
denomination has lost some churches and donors, due partly
to differences over the Bible and homosexuality. The
American Baptists have trimmed their national staff
and plan to sell their national office in
Pennsylvania. The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, based in
Atlanta, was formed in 1991 by moderate and liberal
Southern Baptists who opposed the conservative
Southern Baptist leadership. The fellowship, with churches
mainly in the South, has about 1,900 congregations and a
ministry budget of $16 million. Their joint worship
Friday is on the day that each of their national
meetings overlap.
Nancy Ammerman, a
Boston University sociologist of religion who has
written about Baptist battles, said that creating any kind
of unified Baptist movement is difficult because local
churches cherish their independence. But boosting
cooperation among the different groups, she said, is a
more realistic goal. ''Maybe they could be seen as a united
front,'' Ammerman said, ''so that people would think, Oh,
this is one of those non-Southern Baptist
groups.'' (AP)