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Richard Land--ELRC head

Discussion in 'General Baptist Discussions' started by Speedpass, Jan 24, 2007.

  1. TomVols

    TomVols New Member

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    Dr. Land is a first-rate scholar. Granted, he can come off a bit self-asborbed, but he is no SBC talking point reciter. He took a lot of flak for criticizing Jerry Vines's "Mohammed was a pedophile" line at the 2002 SBC.

    Liberal baptists don't like him because he doesn't spout their talking points.

    The ERLC has a place in SB life. We need to be informed regarding ethical and other issues that pertain to Christianity and the world.
     
  2. gb93433

    gb93433 Active Member
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    Have you ever thought that it is quite possible that the SBC leaders are doing the same thing the Christians did in Germany as you stated. It has been my finding that what they say is often correct but their practice is much less than conservative. Just take a look at the recent Klouda case at SWBTS and the removal of the past registrar there because he cited below standard academics and they did not like it. Today we are seeing the fruit of their humility in an effort to do what they have done for several years and that is they are afraid to admit their mistakes. They have made mistakes and have tried to cover them up in an effort to create a good image. Patterson, the guru among conservatives had an addition built onto the presidents home (with the approval of the trustees) and bringing home animal trophies from other countries while people are starving in those same countries and pastors there would wish for a bicycle just so they would not have to walk for two to three hours among each church they pastor. Doesn't that kind of lifestyle remind one of the message in the book of Amos?
     
  3. gb93433

    gb93433 Active Member
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    Most Baptists know little or nothing Land.
     
  4. gb93433

    gb93433 Active Member
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    Your story is done all in the name of autonomous churches.

    My past neighbor was an excellent evangelical Lutheran pastor and he had great coverage and retirement through the Lutheran organization. The SBC annuity board will take your money but not deal with insurance. Who insures the missionaries supported by CP money your church sends in?

    When I was pastoring I moved to another state and got better insurance through a private insurance carrier for less then 1/2. I was told by the insurance carrier that pastors have very high insurance rates compared to the mainstream population.
     
  5. Baptist Believer

    Baptist Believer Well-Known Member
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    To be fair, if Patterson is actually shooting trophy animals in Africa, then (according to what I have been told) the meat from the edible animals is often given to local villagers after the skins and heads have been removed. The meat from the animals that the locals won't eat is usually left for the lions and hyenas to finish.

    But I still don't understand the attraction of killing for the sake of "sport" nor mounting an extensive collection of animals in your home or office. What does that prove? That you know how to accurately aim and fire a gun?

    Big deal. Almost anyone can learn to accurately use a firearm with some training and practice.
     
  6. Bible-boy

    Bible-boy Active Member

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    Hello Murph,

    Welcome back.:wavey: You are correct in that I shared my personal experience regarding Dr. Land. However, after reading through the thread and the posts following mine I realized that it seemed to be taking a direction that it ought not go. I attempted to head off a potential problem before it got too heated. I have no problem with us discussing the issues, but I must maintain that it ought to be done in a Christian manner that does not attempt to beat up on a man that is not here to defend his own name just because we happen to have a personal issue against him.
     
    #26 Bible-boy, Jan 25, 2007
    Last edited by a moderator: Jan 25, 2007
  7. gb93433

    gb93433 Active Member
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    Then let him buy the locals some guns instead of paying for a flight and a safari. Most likely the money he spent on each flight and taxidermy would provide many pastors in those countries a good salary for several years.
     
  8. Bible-boy

    Bible-boy Active Member

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    With equal respect it is my responsibility to moderate this thread and this forum and keep it from degenerating into a mud slinging contest ground. The best way to ensure that civil discussion and debate flows is to keep the thread focused on issues and not on persons, personalities, or personal disagreements.




    Attempting to associate a public figure with a facet of Nazism based on nothing more than a “My friend said that someone said…” pretty much falls in line with bashing the man's character (particularly when there is plenty of primary source material on record from that public figure, but we don’t even attempt to quote those primary sources and rely solely on hearsay and gossip to make a point).



    It is a standard that I always attempt to uphold. If you see threads involving the above noted men being discussed and they are being bashed based on nothing more than personal dislike for them or the fact that they happen to be the messengers supporting an issue hit the “Report Bad Post” icon and I’ll investigate the matter. There is no way that I can read every post of every thread in the fora that I moderate. We (the Moderators) rely heavily on the BB members to report problem posts.

    It would seem that if you don’t have time to do a bit of research to make your case before you enter into a debate you don’t have time to discuss the issue in the first place. I really don’t want to do the research for you. So I’ll refrain from addressing your question until you first honor my previous request for you to provide some direct quotes from Dr. Land’s published material that would support your claims that he has departed from the traditional Baptist position on the separation of church and state issue.



    The argument about “taking tax money from people that don’t have children” will not fly because their tax dollars are currently being used to support failing public schools. Likewise, every parent that would receive a “school voucher” would not elect to send their kids to a religious based school. Those who did happen to choose to do so would be sending their kids to the school of their choice so questions regarding the particular faith tradition of the school do not enter the picture.
     
    #28 Bible-boy, Jan 25, 2007
    Last edited by a moderator: Jan 25, 2007
  9. Bible-boy

    Bible-boy Active Member

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    Isn’t that how states currently distribute tax dollars… x amount of funding per student per school?



    I don’t buy that argument. Under the school voucher system if the parents/students feel that the child is not getting as good an education as they expect or desire they would be free to move to a “better” or even the best schools. Likewise, I don’t see why it seems that you are saying that all public schools would be “woefully under-funded.” If it is a quality school, with quality teachers, offering quality education, and turning out well educated, well prepared (for higher education and/or chosen career paths) then plenty of parents will elect to send their kids there. The same would hold true for schools that provide education for the special needs students you are talking about. Schools that do not live up to those expectations would not be around long at all.

    What you have described above does not fit into the model suggested in the linked ERLC material. The ERLC says, “
    seeks government accommodation of each student’s right to participate in student-initiated, student-led prayer according to the dictates of individual conscience in public schools, which protects both majority and minority students’ right to pray.”



    Are you sure about that statement? Is there any example in the history of the U.S. that you can think of where a group of Baptists sought to influence a government position or a governmental leader, but maintained that the government ought not be able to hold any influence over the local church?



    Not gossip? What is it called when someone repeats what someone else said about another person, particularly when what is being said paints an individual in a bad or negative light? I am no judge and I am no lawyer, but I am a moderator of this forum. In this forum I would have no problem if you were to tell me that you personally sat in a class and heard Dr. Land say something. As you point out this is not a court of law so why attempt to treat it as such? I don’t expect you to behave as if you were in a court of law with me acting as a judge. However, I do expect us to behave as brothers in Christ and discuss issues without resorting to gossip (hearsay) based on nothing more than “so and so said that what’s his name said X.”



    Okay, so we have both oversimplified what the Nazis did in an attempt to get to the point (and assumed that most folks reading this know a bit of the history already). However, it goes deeper than just the fact that the Nazis dehumanized the people that they wanted to rid from society. You must ask how they were able to dehumanize certain people living in one of the most well educated, technologically advanced, European Christian nations of the day? Why did masses of German Lutherans accept and even embrace such anti-Christian dehumanizing behavior? The answers to these questions are clearly displayed in the documentary Theologians Under Hitler. The renowned Theologian and Christian scholar, Gerhard Kittle, is the one who came up with the “Final Solution!” Likewise, we must ask how it was that some Christian Theologians (like Bonhoeffer) were able to see what was happening and join the resistance. I would place Dr. Land in the Bonhoeffer camp rather than the Kittle camp any day.
     
  10. gb93433

    gb93433 Active Member
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    Theoretically all that sounds good. Money talks. When schools can get more students and spend less they have more money left over. With a voucher system and many more students applying than space available the school could determine its own criteria for admittance. It could require that students take tests such as what colleges require. Special education students, those in lab classes and vocational areas require more money than regular classes. Large schools are cheaper to run than small country schools with just a few students when they are bussed in for the week and then return home on the weekend.

    How many Christian schools are you aware of that teach vocational education?
     
  11. Bible-boy

    Bible-boy Active Member

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    I don't know of any. However, there are plenty of public schools that teach vocational ed. Under a voucher system so long as those schools continue to turn out well educated/prepared kids plenty of parents, whose kids do not plan on going to college, would send their kids there.
     
  12. gb93433

    gb93433 Active Member
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    Over the years I have seen a serious decline in the sciences, engineering, and technological areas. Now we are bringing professors from China to teach our children in thsoe areas. Because of a serious shortage of professors to teach in the sciences, math and technology areas it is good for me because starting professors make at least 10K more than those in the non-sciences and engineering.

    It is cheaper to teach classes like English than the sciences and vocational education. America has sought to go the cheap route and is beginning to pay a price for it. Its capitalism has gotten in the way of educating its people and doing what is best for the homeland. America is all about economics and business ratyher than educating its citizens. Recently it dropped from number one to number 14 among other nations in its education. While other nations have been climbing, America has been all about big business.

    When the number one major in America is accounting we have a serious problem. People spend more time imitating Donald Trump than in the sciences.
     
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