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Missouri Baptist layman takes on emergent movement

NewsJim White  |  June 20, 2009

WINFIELD, Mo. (ABP) — Thirty years  after the Southern Baptist Convention began ridding itself of theological  moderates and liberals, a prominent Missouri Baptist layman is warning  that the nation’s largest non-Catholic faith group now faces a different  kind of liberalism from within.

Roger Moran, research director of the  Missouri Baptist Laymen’s Association, is printing pamphlets to  distribute at the upcoming SBC annual meeting warning messengers about what he views as dangers in a church-planting movement known as the  emerging or emergent church.

Moran says the movement, which aims  to create churches that are culturally relevant to what proponents call a  postmodern society, is making inroads in Southern Baptist  life, particularly in seminaries and the SBC’s publishing arm, LifeWay Christian Resources.

Moran’s 47-page document lays out in detail how controversy over the trend wreaked  havoc among Baptist leadership in his own state and warns that unless it is addressed, similar strife may lie ahead for the SBC.

“In the name of missions,  ministry and evangelism, the SBC is now in danger of embracing a new liberalism  — ‘cultural liberalism’ that claims to be theologically  conservative,’ ” the pamphlet warns.

Unlike in the “battle for the  Bible” that united conservatives against the predominantly moderate-to-progressive SBC bureaucracy of the 1980s, Moran says, the emergent-church crowd affirms the inerrancy of Scripture. As such, he  says, many conservative Southern Baptists view it as nothing more than an  innovative way to win people to Christ.

But Moran says in attempting to  re-invent the image of evangelical Christianity, the emergent church often compromises beliefs such as the SBC’s traditional opposition to use of beverage alcohol.

Moran claims the emergent church is  making particular inroads at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in  Wake Forest, N.C., which has invited Mark Driscoll to speak on campus several times. Driscoll, a controversial figure in the emerging-church movement whose penchant for off-color language earned him the nickname the “cussing preacher,” is pastor of Mars Hill Church in Seattle.

One of Driscoll’s visits, Moran says, was during a “Preview Days” emphasis intended to attract new  students to the campus.

Moran says Ed Stetzer, formerly a church-planting expert at the SBC’s North American Mission Board and now director of LifeWay Research, defends Driscoll. Moran notes that Stetzer is  also a former board member of Acts  29, a network of pastors dedicated to planting new churches  and reinvigorating old ones that Moran says introduced the emergent-church controversy in Missouri.

He points out that in December 2005, upon recommendation of then-Missouri Baptist Convention Executive Director David Clippard, the MBC Executive Board approved a $200,000 loan  for a new church plant in St. Louis called The Journey.

Only afterward did members learn  about unconventional outreach efforts by the group, including a monthly  discussion about theology held at a local beer pub. The event was  promoted on the church website with the line, “grab a brew, give your view.”

Both Daniel Akin, president of Southeastern Seminary, and Stetzer declined to comment for this story.

Moran says he sees little value in  evangelism that professes conservative theology but doesn’t match the talk with what he views as a proper Christian lifestyle.

“Our problem is not in our lack  of conservative theological rhetoric, nor in our lack of efforts in  evangelism, but in our increasing willingness to neglect what Christ said  is the most important of all, the first and greatest commandment,”  Moran said. “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind.”

Moran says his organization has not  issued such a “Viewpoint” document since the days of Project  1000, a Missouri campaign against perceived theological and social  liberalism within the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and the then-moderate leadership of the Missouri Baptist Convention. The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship  is a moderate group that formed in reaction to the SBC controversy  of the 1980s.

Speaking to the SBC Executive Committee in February 2007, Moran described the emergent church as  “one of the most dangerous and deceptive movements to infiltrate the  ranks of Southern Baptist life.”

“Not since the stealth tactics of the CBF have we seen a movement operate so successfully below the  radar of rank-and-file Southern Baptists,” he said.

Bob Allen is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press.

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