Originally posted by FearNot:
baptistbeliever said:
"1.) "Liberals" did not have control of the seminaries. There were moderates and conservatives in control of the seminaries, with a broad spectrum of Baptist viewpoints working together."
Is that true? Moderates? A moderate is simply another name for a liberal that wants to make you think he is not a liberal. Let me rephrase that. There may be some real moderates; however, their ranks are also filled with liberals who are seeking to mask their true identity.
He has taught you well. You are making massive blanket judgements of people you don't know in order to bolster your point. You've presented no evidence -- only patently false charges. You are proving my point.
I can tell you a few things about the evidence that the "moderates" (meaning liberals) left behind at Southeastern. I worked for the Physical Plant at one time here at Southeastern. When we remodled some of the campus buildings we gutted the interiors to redesign the floor plans. What do you think we found? I'll tell you, we found Pornographic material hidden inside walls, we found beer cans stuffed inside holes in the walls.
When we remodled Johnston Dorm (Single Men's Dorm) we found a stash of Porno films in the attic area that had been used as a "party place."
How do you know the material you found was left behind by moderates and liberals? Did they have their names on it? Did only moderates and liberals attend Southeastern?
Let me also point out that the evidence of sin that you found was *hidden*. Doesn't that indicate that it was *not* approved by the leadership of the campus? For that matter, a self-proclaimed fundamentalist I went to seminary with and also worked with was always beating me up about not supporting the "conservative resurgence". He even sabotaged me sometimes at work when I would successfully refute one of his arguments. I kept trying to keep SBC politics out of the workplace so that we could be professionals and do the jobs we were paid to do but he would have none of that. After about a year it became clear that some things he was doing at work were not very honest. My supervisor asked me to start an investigation (I was this person's supervisor) and so I started reviewing videotape. We found rampant evidence of dishonesty on his behalf that he would not admit when we confronted him with it until we played the videotape for him. We also found out that he was beating his wife, committing adultery and stealing items from the worksite. Now I ask you, should I judge your side of the SBC controversy by this one person? The answer is no. How about a person in leadership? There was a trustee at Southwestern Seminary a few years back who gave a friend of mine on staff a terrible time. He persecuted the guy, spread false rumors and confronted him in a meeting calling him "an unrepentant sinner" for his failure to agree with everything that the SBC leadership has done. About a year after that incident, it came out that the trustee had been engaging in sexual relations with at least four women in his church. Should I judge all seminary trustees and SBC agency heads by the actions of this man? The answer is no. If you judge the theology of the leaders by the sins of the followers, then Moses should not be trusted and we should rip the first five books of the Bible (and anything that references them) out of the Bible.
If we are going to make judgments on people's theology, we need to judge what the same people say and do. We need to be careful and get the whole story instead of just sticking a label on someone and dismissing them.
One of our current Southeasten Professors attended Southeastern during its liberal haydays. He says that there were regularly scheduled keg (beer) parties on campus, sponsored and organized by the faculty and staff.
Do you have any independent verification of this other than the word of someone who is obviously tight with the "conservative resurgence" side? What is the name of the professor who made this claim?
He also says that Johnston Dorm was known for the following:
1st floor dorms were for the relatively serious students who studied all the time.
2nd floor dorms were for guys that had their sleep over girlfriends in town (remember Johnston was the single men's dorm).
3rd floor was for the guys that had their sleep over boyfriends in town.
This reminds me of the things I used to hear in college (all the male band geeks are gay, the entire women's volleyball team is composed of lesbians, all of the athletes are godless sexual perverts, all of the theology students are self-righteous preacherboys who are sexually-obsessed hypocrites). While there was probably at least one example of each kind of person in each group, the broad brush statements were patently untrue. It sound like the same sort of campus legends to me. As far as the third item, when I was in high school some people assumed I was gay since I didn't have sex with girls and didn't date that much. Their assumptions were faulty because they assumed that I would do what they would do if I had the opportunity. When I was in seminary, I had male friends come into town to visit from Chicago, Austin and California, but they had their own place to sleep. There was never any sex going on (hetero or homo).
I did not attend Southeastern. My SBC seminary experience is limited to Southwestern, so I can't say if what you are telling me is the truth, but it doesn't sound that credible to me.
Another example of your so-called "moderate" style of instruction at Southeastern was for the faculty to regularly invite openly homosexual guest teachers to come and instruct the students that homosexuality was/is acceptable in God's sight.
Since Southeastern was a place of learning where students were supposed to hear issues from all sides, I don't see a problem. If I remember correctly, the first time I heard many fundamentalist leaders preach was in a Texas Baptist college and at Southwestern under the presidency of Russell Dilday. I used to hear all sorts of sides. I don't believe everything I hear and you shouldn't either.
Don't try and tell me it was run by a mixed group of conservatives and moderates.
Too late.
The left over evidence of the liberal influence that once controlled Southeastern speaks for itself.
Since the left-over "evidence" actually demonstrates that those activities were not approved, I'll let the evidence stand for the truth.
[edited for sloppy HTML formatting]
[ September 04, 2002, 05:45 PM: Message edited by: Baptist Believer ]