By David Currie
I had the pleasure of meeting Walter Cronkite, who died July 17 at age 92, several times in my service on the board of The Interfaith Alliance. He supported our work out of a deep commitment to religious liberty and the need for persons to cooperate for the common good despite their differences.
What made Walter Cronkite so special was the trust that people placed in him. He earned America’s trust by reporting the news in a nonpartisan manner that was both challenging and comforting.
We witnessed his emotion when he had to report the death of President Kennedy, his elation and awe when Neil Armstrong became the first person to set foot on the moon, and the pain that he expressed upon realizing that America’s effort to win in Vietnam was becoming a failure.
I frequently speak and write about the importance of religious liberty and the First Amendment. As we reflect on the life of Walter Cronkite, we need to remember that freedom of the press is also a part of the First Amendment.
I read several articles this past week that related that, in many countries, the only news people receive is what the government wants them to hear. Everything else is censored.
Sometimes the press angers me, with its seeming disregard for a person’s privacy. But when all’s said and done, a free press is essential in the life and history of America. A free press is essential to our own day-to-day freedom.
I think that we Texas Baptists – far too often – take for granted our own Baptist Standard. In fact, although I may call it “our own” because it is a long-time Texas Baptist institution, the truth is that what makes the Baptist Standard so special is that no one “owns” it. The Baptist Standard is independent of the Baptist General Convention of Texas and tells Texas Baptists “the truth with the bark on it,” as James Dunn would say.
In many state Baptist conventions, the convention itself controls the Baptist press in that state. The press is merely a mouthpiece for the convention leadership, as is true with the Southern Baptist Convention’s own mouthpiece, Baptist Press. So, what readers in those states get is the “news” that the leadership permits to be published.
That is why practically the first thing the SBC leadership did — after consolidating fundamentalist control of the convention in 1990 — was to fire Dan Martin and Al Shackleford. Those two men had refused to bow down to the fundamentalist leadership of the SBC, especially Judge Paul Pressler, and they lost their jobs because of their integrity.
After the fundamentalists took control of Baptist Press, Baptists nationwide needed a new, independent news organization to provide them with accurate, factual stories of what was happening in Baptist life. The result was Associated Baptist Press, which continues to provide credible and objective reporting as the only independent news service created by and for Baptists.
The Baptist Standard and Associated Baptist Press, along with Baptists Today — a monthly publication on whose board I proudly serve — are all ministries worthy of support. They all help us to stay informed on the real, authentic, traditional Baptist story.
All of us need to remember and cherish how special it is to be a part of a free Baptist movement — and to have an independent news source that provides us with all of the news accurately, good and bad, gratifying and heart-breaking.
And I am grateful and thrilled that I had the privilege of getting to know — even just a little bit — the courageous and gracious Walter Cronkite. He loved America and freedom, and he celebrated it with a life of integrity and service to the truth.