News and commentary on Religion, especially Southern religion.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Inquisition at a Southern Baptist seminary?

Oklahoma pastor Wade Burleson says today that Dr. Paige Patterson, president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Texas, is using the economic implosion to dump Calvinist professors.

Burleson, an outspoken former member of the Southern Baptist Convention's International Mission Board, reports there was a staff gathering yesterday at which some whose heads are on the block were cross-examined, albeit not quite stretched on the rack.

John Calvin

The details of today's brief Burleson blog may be hotly debated. One commenter already says there was no such professorial gathering at SWBTS. Yet there is no denying that Anti-Calvinism has been on the march in the Southern Baptist Convention.

Someone should note that Batholics and Cathists are merely continuing to destructively exercise the institutional power which came to their hands with the conservative takeover of the SBC as the result of a running battle from the late 1970s through the 1990s. The losing moderates predicted that conservatives would soon begin driving out the somehow insufficiently fundamentalist.

Burleson has, in this most recent blog and elsewhere, resisted that narrowing. He argues that doctrinal diversity is indispensable to a healthy SBC. He argues that a spirit which "demands doctrinal conformity," like the demands he says are being made at SWBTS, is destructive to the entire denomination.

1 comment:



  1. "Southwestern will not build a school in the future around anybody who could not look anybody in the world in the eyes and say, "Christ died for your sins."

    Paige Patterson, SWBTS President, as tape recorded by SBC Today at their “Baptist Identity” blog on February 5, 2009



    “A consistent five-point Calvinist cannot look a congregation in the eyes or even a single sinner in the eye and say: “Christ died for you.” What they have to say to be consistent with their own theology is “Christ died for sinners.” Since Christ did not die for the non-elect, and since the five-point Calvinist does not know who the elect are, it is simply not possible in a preaching or witnessing situation to say to them directly “Christ died for you.”

    Dr. David Allen, Dean, SWBTS School of Theology at BaptistTheology.org / SWBTS Center for Theological Research, November 2008

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