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Baptists urged to consider risks of ‘majoritarian faith’

NewsJim White  |  June 18, 2009

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (ABP) — Baptists in the United States — who find themselves members of a religious majority or plurality in many areas — would do well to remember their humble beginnings as a persecuted minority and to reconsider the dangers of a “majoritarian faith,” Baptist scholar Doug Weaver urged at a recent Baptist history conference.

While Baptists proudly point to religious liberty and church-state separation as their distinctive contributions to American history, Weaver said, contemporary Baptist heirs to that tradition may find it difficult to relate to their 17th-century forebears who were part of a persecuted minority of dissenters to official state-supported denominations.

“We have climbed the ladder of success numerically, socially and intellectually. We have an air of respectability,” said Weaver, a religion professor at Baylor University in Waco, Texas, who formerly taught at Bluefield College. “We are the majority; hear us roar.”

In contrast, he noted, it was persecuted minority groups — Anabaptists, Baptists and Quakers — that “pushed the Christian world in the 16th and 17th centuries to face the music and hear cries for complete religious liberty.”

Ironically, he added, many of those dissenters who fled to America to escape persecution in Europe soon used that hard-won freedom to persecute those in the New World who did not share their religious views.

John Leland, the 18th-century Virginia Baptist advocate of religious freedom, noted that whenever you try to force a union of church and state to create a Christian nation, you have created a monster that denies liberty of conscience to anyone who dares to be different, Weaver said.

Weaver challenged American Christians to re-read their Bibles from the perspective of a religious minority group. From Moses and the Exodus to Daniel in the lion’s den to the teachings of Jesus to accounts of the early church, the Bible is filled with examples of the persecuted minority, he said.

“Can we hear Bible passages in the way that persecuted minorities have heard them when they talk about freedom? Can we read Bible passages like persecuted minorities would when they were being denied religious freedom by the government or by a majority group that was defining how free they can be?” he asked.

“I wonder who really understands the implications of freedom,” he added. “Those people who don’t have it and desperately want it, or those people who are threatened that they might lose control of it?”

The Bible and church history call 21st-century Baptists to “look in the mirror of our ‘majoritarian faith’ and see its risks,” Weaver said. Among those risks are:

• “We cease to affirm religious liberty for all because we are now the majority.”

• “We fear losing our status as a majority faith in an ever-increasing(ly) pluralistic world, so our response is to assert oppressive control only majorities can pull off.”

• “We now become [like] the colonial Puritans and think that freedom is only for us and should be defined by us.”

• “We hide behind the rhetoric of being a Christian nation to justify religious favoritism toward our majority viewpoint,” forgetting that “Baptists’ forefathers and foremothers were persecuted by so-called national churches.”

• “We abandon — even denigrate — the separation of church and state that we desperately cried for when we were a minority faith in our infant years.”

•“We forget that freedom is a gift from God and not ours to withhold.”

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Tags:Associated Baptist PressDavid Wilkinson2009 Archives
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