Story
DALLAS—Southern Baptist Theological Seminary President R. Albert Mohler Jr. provides “the kind of visionary leader Southern Baptists need to communicate a missional conservatism and biblical clarity to the world,” stated Robert Jeffress, pastor of the historic First Baptist Church of Dallas in announcing his intention to nominate the 47-year-old Mohler for Southern Baptist Convention president in June.
In a news release provided to the Southern Baptist TEXAN Jan. 2, Jeffress said his decision is the result of prayer and concern for the future of Southern Baptists’ global witness. He said he believes Mohler would “motivate Southern Baptists to unite around cooperation for global missions and evangelism.”
Al Mohler to be Nominated for SBC Presidency
Discussion in 'General Baptist Discussions' started by PastorSBC1303, Jan 2, 2008.
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Praise God! Edited to say I answered my own question by reading the story! :))
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good! He's a good man... and probably he's forgotten as much as I know :laugh:
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That is wonderful news !
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Intellectually brilliant and theologically sound. And he has the political savvy to navigage the SBC land mines.
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This is all that's necessary to even further divide the SBC. Southern Baptists used to be a powerful force for good in this country. Now more often than not they stand on they wrong side of many issues. BTW, every major Protestant denomination and the Catholics came out publically against the war in Iraq except one, the SBC.
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Mohler has the brilliance of Einstein
A master theologian -
You say that like it's a bad thing. That's about the most honest and intelligent thing the SBC has done with regard to the international situation this past year.
I do, however, have to agree that this nomination will divide the SBC further. The division will be theological, though, not political. Mohler, for all his correct cultural, moral stands he espouses, is a dyed in the wool Calvinist. Most Southern Baptists are not. If the Calvinists are true to form, they will arrogantly proclaim their superiority and entitlement to return to the leadership of the SBC -- and it will breed alot of unnecessary resentment and conflict.
The wise thing for Baptists to do is reelect Frank Page (if he's going to be renominated) and let it ride for another year. That will at least give some a chance to breathe and consider the impact of such issues. It won't change anything, but it will give folks room to plan for the fallout.
JDale -
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What more can I say! :godisgood:
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BaptistBeliever----what in the world does the invasion of Iraq have to do with Al Mohler and the SBC?????:type:
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1. If Dr. Mohler's Calvinism does become an issue, he will defuse it quickly pointing to his record on missions and evangelism. People will remember that he and Paige Patterson had a vigorous, but cordial and civil, discussion of the issue at a SBC Pastors Conference. Dr. Patterson has preached at Southern Seminary Chapel. Such acts send a strong message. Those who oppose Dr. Mohler because he is a Calvinist are going to wind up looking silly.
2. Dr. Mohler is not, and will not be, a polarizing figure. A huge number of Southern Baptists, Cals and non-Cals, think he is a real heavyweight, intellectually and theologically. -
Part of the SBC's problem is we've divided people up; considering some "heavyweights" and "master theologians"; It adds to the political garbage that plagues the convention, not for the better.
I'll take the person who intimately knows Jesus over any particular "system"; and that doesn't show by degrees or debating ability. By the way....I'm not saying anything about Molher. I like him. I'm talking about how believers lift up other believers to ridiculous levels. -
Further, by definition, an election for any office divides people. And don't a lot of people you know trumpet that one of the Baptist strengths is its diversity?
Even so, we Cals, non-Cals, dispys, a-mils, Landmarkers, anti-Landmarkers, and every other kind of Southern Baptist manage every year get together to send out more missionaries than any other religious group.
We're not perfect, we squabble, and sometimes we embarrass ourselves. What some folks see as division is simply Southern Baptists acting normally. -
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Dr. Al Mohler would make a fine president of the Southern Baptist Convention. Maybe he could work to undo the damaging work done by the bean counter Bobby Welch.
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It would be my prayer that the non-Calvinists and Calvinists within the Southern Baptist Convention could learn to get along with each other (despite their differences). Debates are good, fights are not. I can only pray that the leadership, on both sides, will show spiritual maturity when it comes to this issue. I would point people to the debate/discussion held at the Southen Baptist Convention in Greensboro between Drs. Paige Patterson and Al Mohler. They both showed spiritual maturity and an ability to disagree in a friendly manner. We need more of that and less of the other.
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I do not think Page can be nominated again, he has served his 2 years. He was elected in Greensboro 2006.
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