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Texas Baptists take action against church suspected of affirming gays

NewsBaptist News  |  March 16, 2010

DALLAS (ABP) — The Baptist General Convention of Texas said March 17 it was asking Royal Lane Baptist Church in Dallas to remove mention of its affiliation with the state convention from church publications and would hold any funds received by the church in escrow until the church clarifies its position on homosexuality.

Randel Everett, executive director of the BGCT, said in a statement on the convention's website that while the church has taken no official action on welcoming and affirming gays, public remarks by church leaders suggest a position "clearly different from the historic theological position" of the state convention.

Questions about the church's views on homosexuality stem from a March 6 newspaper article about the congregation changing its website to describe itself as a "vibrant mosaic of varied racial identities, ethnicities, sexual orientations, and denominational backgrounds."

Everett said BGCT leaders met with the church's pastor and a deacon, and that deacons met March 14 and asked the church to clarify its position on the issue.

"It is my prayer that Royal Lane Baptist Church will take the appropriate action to return to these Texas Baptist values and restore its fellowship with the BGCT," Everett said.

"How can we share the hope of Christ with all people and at the same time reflect the righteousness of Christ?" Everett said. "How can we welcome everyone to our churches and preach that all of us must be rescued from the destructiveness of sin by Christ? This is obviously a challenging situation that all of our churches face."

Though Texas Baptists place a high value on church autonomy, the BGCT confronted University Baptist Church in Austin in the late 1990s over its ordination of a gay man as deacon. University reluctantly left the BGCT.

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