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IMB trustee investigation rejects allegations of board impropriety

Discussion in 'General Baptist Discussions' started by gb93433, Feb 2, 2007.

  1. gb93433

    gb93433 Active Member
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    http://www.abpnews.com/www/1659.article

    IMB trustee investigation rejects allegations of board impropriety
    By Robert Marus
    Published: February 1, 2007



    ONTARIO, Calif. (ABP) -- The Southern Baptist Convention's International Mission Board, following an internal investigation, has rejected a trustee's accusations of impropriety and unauthorized tightening of doctrinal parameters.
    The board reportedly approved a report, based on its own executive committee's investigations into the charges, Jan. 31. There was no recorded dissent or discussion regarding the report at the meeting, which took place in Ontario, Calif.
    The committee said the board retains "the prerogative and responsibility of further defining the parameters of doctrinal beliefs and practices of its missionaries." That came in response to a request to investigate why trustees had instituted two requirements for missionary candidates that go beyond the doctrinal parameters of the 2000 Baptist Faith and Message, the denomination's official confession of faith.
    The investigation came in response to a motion, made by trustee Wade Burleson, during the SBC's 2006 annual meeting in June. Burleson asked for an investigation by the SBC Executive Committee into several areas of IMB business for which the board had recently come under criticism.
    The Oklahoma pastor's motion called for an investigation into five allegations:
    1. The alleged "manipulation of the nominating process of the Southern Baptist Convention during the appointment of trustees for the IMB."
    2. "Attempts to influence and/or coerce the IMB trustees, staff, and administration to take a particular course of action by one or more Southern Baptist agency heads other than the president of the IMB."
    3. "The appropriate and/or inappropriate use of forums and executive sessions of the IMB as compared to conducting business in full view of the Southern Baptist Convention and the corresponding propriety and/or impropriety of the chairman of the IMB excluding any individual trustee, without Southern Baptist Convention approval, from participating in meetings where the full IMB is convened."
    4. "The legislation of new doctrinal requisites for eligibility to serve as employees or missionaries of the IMB beyond the 2000 Baptist Faith and Message."
    5. "The suppression of dissent by trustees in the minority through various means by those in the majority, and the propriety of any agency forbidding a trustee, by policy, from publicly criticizing a board approved action."
    When Burleson made his motion during the SBC meeting, then-SBC President Bobby Welch referred the motion to the IMB. That practice is typical when motions pertaining to a particular SBC agency are presented at convention meetings.
    Burleson's motion grew out of particularly contentious time for the IMB, when the board's leadership attempted to rebuke him for his public criticism of previous board actions placing on missionaries theological restrictions that he -- and other Southern Baptists -- said go beyond SBC doctrinal consensus.
    One policy bans the appointment of new missionaries who practice a "private prayer language." Jerry Ranking, IMB president, has said he previously practiced the controversial prayer practice, related to glossolalia, or speaking in tongues. The other policy placed new restrictions on what modes of baptism would count as acceptable for missionary candidates.
    The IMB investigators said the board had the right to enact those new restrictions, even if they go beyond the parameters of the convention's confessional document.
    "While the Baptist Faith and Message represents a general confession of Southern Baptist beliefs related to Biblical teachings on primary doctrinal and social issues, the IMB retains the prerogative and responsibility of further defining the parameters of doctrinal beliefs and practices of its missionaries who serve Southern Baptists with accountability to this board," the report said.
    Burleson, in a Feb 1 response posted on his blog, kerussocharis.blogspot.com, said that aspect of the report "causes me the most concern." However, he declined to comment further on the subject until two separate, ad hoc IMB committees appointed to review the controversial policies report back to trustees at the board's March meeting.
    However, other Southern Baptist were highly critical of the report.
    "The end of this is simply that the [board of trustees] of the IMB does not think the SBC as a whole should be telling them what to do and how to do it," wrote Art Rogers, another Oklahoma pastor who operates the Twelve Witnesses blog (www.twelvewitnesses.com). "This should surprise no one. We already knew that the [board] felt that they had a better grasp on their agency than the general population of the SBC and especially better than the blogger-informed crowd that seemed to support this motion."
    He continued: "As far as my expectations go, this is pretty much what I was ready to receive. When you ask an agency to police itself against accusations that it is failing to police itself, then you can’t expect much else."
    Burleson also accused trustees of bending to undue influence from SBC leaders outside the board and alleged that members of the convention's nominating committee had attempted to place people with hidden agendas as IMB trustees.
    In response to those aspects of Burleson's motion, the IMB committee said it had no authority to investigate actions by other SBC bodies -- in this case, the convention's nominating committee and other SBC bodies.
    "It is assumed that any and all heads of SBC entities are concerned about the effectiveness of all entities in order for the SBC to fulfill its kingdom task in the world," the IMB investigators said. "While the IMB may exercise authority over its own president and elected staff, we are not in a position to question or investigate the actions and motives of heads of other entities."
    Burleson, responding to that determination, said it was precisely the reason he asked the SBC for an external investigation of the IMB in the first place.
    "This is why I asked for the Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention to look into the matter," he wrote. "The IMB is not in a position to question or investigate the motives of heads of other entities, but somebody sure should be in a position to demand that an agency head stop undermining the work, vision and agenda of a fellow agency head -- and that somebody is the Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention or the SBC herself."
    In response to the other two aspects of Burleson's motion -- the accusation that trustees had improperly conducted business in closed forums and suppressed dissent among trustees -- the investigators said the board was conducting its business properly.
    "The IMB does not allow formal business to be transacted in its closed trustee forums, but uses this time for prayer, personal testimonies and preliminary questions and discussions regarding issues of mutual concern between senior staff and trustees," the investigators wrote.
    Burleson said he agreed that the IMB's business had been conducted in a more appropriate manner since the board's leadership changed hands and new trustees joined the body in June.
    "[T]hank God that [IMB trustee] forums are now filled with praise reports, testimonials and prayer. This is the way it should be, but my personal experience, as well as that of others, is that this kind of forum has not always been the case," he wrote.
    "I have consistently and repeatedly advocated that the business of any agency of the Southern Baptist Convention be done in full view of the entire convention through plenary sessions,” he wrote. “But for the safety of missionaries in security three zones or extraordinarily sensitive personnel matters, all the business of the IMB is appropriate for public viewing. I think every trustee now understands this point and is doing everything to insure that closed doors be spent in prayer and testimony and not politics."
    The investigators also said any IMB trustee has ample opportunity to express dissent throughout the board's decision-making process.
    "All board-approved actions result from a process of committee, and sometimes multiple committees, consideration before they are brought to a plenary session for adoption," the report said. "All trustees have opportunity in the committee process and plenary session to express and advocate minority opinions. As in any democratic body, once the majority has determined the action to be taken, the board feels that the action should receive the unified public support of all trustees for the sake of effectively moving forward to fulfill our mission task."
    Burleson said he agreed, but "with one caveat -- if the policy violates Scripture, then no matter how strong anyone's desire for unity is, it cannot become a stumbling block to seeking correction. Further, even if some refuse to see that their views are based on tradition and not Scripture, and if their interpretations are regarding doctrines that are beyond the BFM 2000, then though it may be the trustees prerogative to demand doctrinal conformity on these tertiary doctrines, the more appropriate question may be, 'should they?'"
     
  2. rbell

    rbell Active Member

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    is it possible to have a coronary from "not being surprised?"
     
  3. Tom Butler

    Tom Butler New Member

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    So what we have now is an IMB with one policy on baptism and private prayer language, and the other SBC entities with different policies on the subject.

    So one may not be qualified to serve for the IMB, but may be perfectly okay for NAMB.

    Actually, I think the IMB policies are pretty good. But I think narrowing the parameters, as some have put it, should not be done at the cost of having the SBC entities sending mixed messages.
     
  4. Baptist Believer

    Baptist Believer Well-Known Member
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    Let's have Paige Patterson investigate whether or not getting rid of Bullock and Klouda was a good idea! We would finally get down to the bottom of those situations and settle everything. :BangHead:
     
  5. go2church

    go2church Active Member
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    What...they didn't find anything, what a freak n' surprise! Didn't see that one coming!

    So what answer do you get when you ask how many full-time (as in like a pastor at First Baptist Wherever) missionaries are their serving overseas? That's what we should be investigating!
     
  6. gb93433

    gb93433 Active Member
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  7. StefanM

    StefanM Well-Known Member
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    QUOTE: ""While the Baptist Faith and Message represents a general confession of Southern Baptist beliefs related to Biblical teachings on primary doctrinal and social issues, the IMB retains the prerogative and responsibility of further defining the parameters of doctrinal beliefs and practices of its missionaries who serve Southern Baptists with accountability to this board," the report said."
    -----------

    Translation: Shut up. We make the rules, and you follow. We don't really care whether or not we go beyond the BFM.
     
  8. Karen

    Karen Active Member

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    Is it that simple a matter, though?
    Before the "conservative resurgence" of the late 1970's, I knew a couple who earnestly desired to go as overseas missionaries. They never went because the then-named Foreign Mission Board would not accept them.
    Why? Because one of their children had an ongoing illness. It was readily treatable in the U.S. but not in the area to which the couple wanted to go. The Board chose to further define the parameters of the practices of its missionaries in that instance beyond the Baptist Faith & Message 1963.

    I realize that 99% of the recent conversations on the blogs has revolved around doctrinal issues, but maybe there are other things involved that we would do well to think about further?
    Do we really want the Board to rubberstamp any candidate who affirms the BF & M 2000, and that is all the Board can look at?
     
  9. StefanM

    StefanM Well-Known Member
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    I am not saying that the board cannot make other regulations. They should. It is imperative that they do so. Medical regulations are very important and are obviously not addressed in the BFM. Logistical concerns would be another appropriate area of regulation.

    With respect to doctrinal matters, however, for the IMB to go beyond the statement of faith for the SBC is inappropriate. It's a simple matter of perspective.

    For me (and others--like Wade Burleson), the proper method on doctrine is to use the BFM--no more restrictive, no less restrictive. IMO, the trustees have the clear authority to deny appointment to those who do not endorse the BFM.

    This statement, however, seems to indicate that the method is now simply to look at the BFM and to be no less restrictive. The board claims the sole authority to be as restrictive as they so choose. There is nothing stopping the board of trustees from refusing to appoint any missionaries who are not five-point Calvinists baptized in a Southern Baptist church east of the Mississippi river by a pastor with at least 25 years of pastoral experience. Of course, they would not likely adopt such ridiculous regulations.

    I believe that someone associated with the board referred to Southern Seminary's use of the Abstract of Principles as a statement of faith, despite its being more restrictive than the BFM (only Calvinists allowed). While I do not agree with the restriction at SBTS, I recognize that the abstract predates the BFM. I'm not happy, but I'm not losing sleep. With the IMB they have chosen to supersede the BFM's regulations with more restrictive ones. The BFM came first.
     
    #9 StefanM, Feb 2, 2007
    Last edited by a moderator: Feb 2, 2007
  10. El_Guero

    El_Guero New Member

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    What Baptist entity is in Ontario, CA?
     
    #10 El_Guero, Feb 2, 2007
    Last edited by a moderator: Feb 2, 2007
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