At the Recent Southern Baptist Convention, the King Was Greatly Praised

At the Recent Southern Baptist Convention, the King Was Greatly Praised 2018-06-16T14:55:01-04:00

What has happened to evangelicals in America? Has the age of Trump truly ruined any measure of Christian witness and purpose in the world?

I’ve spoken about this often, and there is scant evidence to prove me wrong, at this point, although I pray for it.

In what could likely be labeled as Exhibit #372, I’d like to discuss what happened at the most recent Southern Baptist Convention.

The Southern Baptists are the largest Protestant denomination in the United States. The most recent convention was already under a shadow, in regards to sexual misconduct in the church and how best to handle those issues, as a church body.

The former president of the Southern Baptists, Paige Patterson, was recently relieved of his post, given several reported cases of alleged rape among students, and his response to those allegations.

There were also some uncomfortable comments about a teenager’s body that became too troublesome to ignore.

Of course, his comments suggesting wives should stay with abusive husbands didn’t help, either.

None of what went on with Patterson was godly. It was time for him to go.

And we recognize people are fallible. The SBC did the right thing in replacing him. They could just move on, repair the damage, and continue in their purpose.

That’s not what they’re doing. They’re transforming.

For this year’s convention, Vice President Mike Pence was invited to speak. It wouldn’t have been an issue, were it not that this convention is meant to be a gathering of church leaders, for prayer and commitment to the goals of unity and purpose. Some church leaders were uncomfortable with the idea of a politician coming to speak, wishing to avoid the appearance of politics.

Wise.

“We must do all that we can to preserve the purity of the gospel, and this invitation works against it,” Pastor Garrett Kell said, according to The Tennessean. Kell argued Pence’s speech slot should be replaced with prayer in order to avoid the optics of the evangelical church aligned with a political party.

Last week, they voted, and Kell’s concerns were dismissed, as the group decided to keep VP Pence’s invitation alive.

Said Grant Ethridge, chairman of the conventions committee on order of business:

“As a committee, we feel to not show hospitality to those in authority would be a bad testimony for Southern Baptists.”

He added, “I believe we respect the position regardless of whether or not you supported or voted for the person.”

He’s absolutely correct. You respect the position and office, but that doesn’t mean you turn a prayer gathering into a political rally.

Pence knows how important keeping a line open with evangelicals is, considering their support in 2016. In fact, 80 percent of white, self-described evangelicals voted for Trump.

So what did VP Pence, himself considered to be a strong evangelical, choose to speak about? Were the concerns of seeing the convention degraded into some sort of two-bit political rally unfounded?

They were not.

Pence devoted much of his speech to touting the Trump’s administration’s achievements since taking office.

“It’s been 500 days of action … 500 days of promises made and promises kept,” he said.

He enthused about Trump’s meeting this week with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and received a big ovation by mentioning the relocation of the U.S. Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem — a longstanding goal of many U.S. evangelicals.

Incredible.

No peace was achieved, only a photo-op that served the tyrant of North Korea more than the United States, and a buzz about the relocation of the U.S. Embassy, even though our ambassador there will be commuting between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, since he has no office in Jerusalem (and Trump signed the 6-month waiver, immediately after the Embassy ceremony last month).

Pence drew more loud applause when he declared Trump “the most pro-life president in American history” and noted that he has appointed many conservatives to federal judgeships.

He just signed an omnibus bill that doles out nearly half a billion dollars to Planned Parenthood, but, hey, MAGA, or something.

Pence did exactly what he was sent to do. He carried out his task and disrupted the purpose of the convention to bring glory to the king.

Donald Trump.

The majority of the crowd forgot why they were there and cheered on Pence’s speech, some even calling for “Four more years!”

Mike Pence is said to be a strong Christian, but at an evangelical convention, where was his focus?

Someone did the math, and it’s an eye-opener.


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