News and commentary on Religion, especially Southern religion.

Showing posts with label Baptist Press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baptist Press. Show all posts

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Nothing in SBC's Baptist Press about Land's apology [Addendum]

Baptist Press Logo

Three days after Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) ethics czar was compelled to apologize for his remarks in a letter to the Anti-Defamation League, SBC's Baptist Press still offer's only staffer Paul F. South's unamended report of Land's error-riddled speech.

No mention of the apology.

The independent Associated Baptist Press wrote about the apology, but the official SBC news service has yet to tell anyone who relies on it the simple truth about the matter.

Addendum

On Oct. 21 Baptist Press reported Land's apology and self-exculpation.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Will joins BP in hornets' nest kicking

George Will joined Baptist Press in kicking hornets' nests this week. Indeed, Will's choice of nests recalled the BP response to Southern Baptist Environment and Climate Initiative (SBECI), as chronicled by Jonathan Merritt. For Will turned his acid intellectual pen to defending the pseudo science of "global cooling," which was given some friendly treatment by BP (just as global warming got a Southern Baptist cold shoulder) while Merritt struggled vainly in 2008 to get corrective messages through to a BP editor.

Messages to Will are public, however. Neither he nor his staff need answer phone or email for compelling correctives to be filed.

Nate Silver gave Will his comeuppance over what may yet be called "Will's Law," as a jape.

As Ezra Klein puts it:

In other words, comparing apples to apples, the scientific community didn't believe in global cooling and does believe in global warming. Sadly, our political pundits have outsourced their scientific research to an intern charged with a superficial skim of Newsweek covers.

Sound stewardship of facts, or climate, anyone?

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Baptist Press kicks the hornets' nest

The Southern Baptist Convention's (SBC) Baptist Press (BP) news service stepped on the heels of an enthusiastically received Feb. 6 appearance in North Carolina by Mark Driscoll. They published a critical piece on Feb. 11, while the bloom of that appearance was still on the rose.

The story was "assembled" from a Jan. 9 New York Times Magazine article about the dynamic Seattle pastor, other previously published reactions and some original quotes.

Mark Driscoll

Mark Driscoll

Presented to an audience rich in recently inspired Driscoll enthusiasts under the headline Driscoll's vulgarity draws media attention, it was the equivalent of kicking a hornets' nest.

Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary (SEBTS), which hosted the Feb. 6/7 conference where Discoll spoke, blogged disappointment with the "inaccurate content and harsh tone" of the article.

Ed Stetzer of the SBC's Lifeway Research stepped forward to obliquely defend "my friend Mark Driscoll" from unfortunate coverage in general (BP was mentioned only in comments by others).

Jonathan Merritt was less gentle in his North Carolina Biblical Recorder op-ed piece Unfair, Unbalanced, and Unacceptable. He blistered BP, and also recalled how release of the Southern Baptist Environment and Climate Initiative (SBECI) in March, 2008, drew immediate reaction from BP:

“Less than 24 hours after the story appeared in national media, Baptist Press had a story distancing the denomination from the document,” the Christian Index reported. They went on to note that Baptist Press “generated an additional 13 stories over the next 8 publishing days. The majority of those took issue with the topic. . . .” During this time, I left multiple voice mails and sent several emails to BP Editor Will Hall to clarify journalistic inaccuracies an offer the other side of the story, but I received no reply.

"No reply," yet one of the most redeeming values of good American news journalism is communication with the subjects of stories and correction of errors and omissions.

Reply is a newsroom requirement, like the correction of errors.

"No reply" is not an option.

Everyone trained in the field knows that. And experience teaches that prompt reply, and appropriate corrective response when one errs, are both required to protect one's reputation for quality and win community loyalty.

BP appears to have neither replied nor made satisfactory corrections in the earlier case cited by Meritt, and made some changes but offered little response to the Driscoll matter.

Corrective passion flowed into blogs and environments like and including twitter, as it would have to some degree no matter how BP responded. Snowballing blog commentary is summarized by Timmy Brister's' annotated list of selected links.

Amid the fire and brimstone, we did find one comment in defense of BP.

From this old newspaperman's point of view, the story doesn't look malicious, as some seem to us to have implied by calling it a "hit job." Just incomplete and outdated by facts immediately available to both an important part of the audience and perhaps, with some effort, available to the author.

As a result, a vocal segment of the audience felt poorly served. In our opinion, it was, as usually happens with dated, incomplete stories.

In an environment rich in other sources of information, the audience's protest will be corrective. In part because, as they demonstrated, they're no longer simply the audience. They also publish.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Ethics Daily blasts Baptist Press exaggeration

Ethics Daily set out to correct Baptist Press overstatement of damage done Gaza Baptist Church in an Israeli air strike against a nearby structure.

Associated Baptist Press, a competitor of Baptist Press, seems to have had no trouble getting the story right.

The original Baptist Press version was a heady mix of opinion and exaggeration.

We found it enlightening to put the BP version up in a window beside the Ethics Daily analysis and read the two pieces side-by-side.

It seems to us that BP was well and properly shellacked.