When does one execute power and authority??
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/16560394.htmhttp://http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/16560394.htm
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/16560394.htmhttp://http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/16560394.htm
Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
Jack Matthews said:The fact of the matter is that they offered her a position in good faith, and then took it away from her in bad faith. Let's cut to the chase. They LIED to her. They were DISHONEST, and then they tried to cover it up and keep it a secret. Dr. Klouda kept the secret, and quietly went to another job. That's a testimony to her faith.
gb93433 said:They lied to her, but who stood for justice and the ethical treatment of employees?
If you're thinking about other faculty members, then you need to know that every faculty member has to sign an agreement that they will not say anything critical of the seminary, nor do anything that might in any way damage the reputation of the seminary. That gag order was instituted about the time they brought in Ken Hemphill.gb93433 said:They lied to her, but who stood for justice and the ethical treatment of employees?
You're absolutely right. This is nothing new.preachinjesus said:Let's not forget that this kind of thing is the usual course at Southwestern over the last 15 years or so.
Yep. And just try to get a straight story regarding why they changed the locks to the door of the president's office during his final meeting with the trustees...* They wanted to get rid of Dilday so they praised him one morning before the students and fired him that night
Yep.* Dr. Crutchley was "promoted" from Dean of the School of Theology to Dean of Future Visioneering (or whatever that was) after Dr. Hemphill had to hire several new administration figures
Yep.* The whole registrar thing
Yep.* Dr. Karen Bullock, one of the finest educators was released in a similiar way to Dr. Klouda
Yep.* Dr. Klouda was released after her time at Southwestern which brings us to the current issues at play
You will know them by their fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor a bad tree bear good fruit. You can judge the spirituality and character of others by the way they conduct themselves.I just don't understand why this is all happening.
Jesus said, "By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another."It saddens me. We are Christians, we are supposed to be lights to the world with our testimony. While I certainly agree that if someone is doing a poor job or violating established rules than we need to relieve them of their employment, but when we do that should we not allow them more than the secular world allows with severence and job placement opportunities?
Baptist Believer said:If you're thinking about other faculty members, then you need to know that every faculty member has to sign an agreement that they will not say anything critical of the seminary, nor do anything that might in any way damage the reputation of the seminary. That gag order was instituted about the time they brought in Ken Hemphill.
And students face consequences too. In 1994, during my last semester at SWBTS, Ken Hemphill told me in no uncertain terms that if I said or did anything that might cause the trustees to get upset with me, I would personally face severe consequences for anything I say or wrote.
Criswell CollegeMartin said:Just a question. Did Patterson have these problems when he moved to Southeastern?
Jack Matthews said:The bottom line was that they wanted to get off on the cheap and still have their kids in a private school. I still wonder what the outside world thinks about a Christian organization that pays its employees so poorly, has some people who gripe because the wives of teachers and administrators work instead of staying home where they belong, and doesn't help with health insurance.
Bluefalcon said:This is just a question, because I'm not sure. Legally, could Southwestern fire a professor who divorces his wife for no other reason than simply that it doesn't want that person teaching their students when there are others (i.e., non-divorced with the same credentials) who could do the same or better job?
Jimmy C said:I'll put it this way - I am a big fan of BH Carroll Theological Institute, Truett and Logsden, the long PP stays at SWBTS the better off those seminaries are. Long Live Pope Paige!!
He has huge problems - a declining enrollment, trying to build a huge edifice to himself, rising costs, more administrators and VPs (with seminary paid cars) than you can shake a stick at. One wonders when and if the trustees will wake up - or is he too much of an institution and "hero" of the conservative resurgence to do anything about?
This is an overstatement at best and falsehood at worse. How much about legal employment practices do you know? I seriously doubt, from what I’ve read, that she has sustainable grounds for a wrongful termination suit.Jack Matthews said:From a legal perspective, Southwestern Seminary should be extremely grateful to the professor for not filing suit and taking the floor out from underneath them. She could own the campus if she wanted to.
That’s your viewpoint but others may see it differently based on a Biblical interpretation.If a seminary were an extension of a single, local church, as an equipping ministry of that one congregation, perhaps the contention that a woman teaching in the position is not consistent with scripture would have some merit. However, that's not the issue here.
This is strong language. Lying carries the intention to deceive. Did they intend to deceive her when they offered employment? If so, who did this? How do you know?The fact of the matter is that they offered her a position in good faith, and then took it away from her in bad faith. Let's cut to the chase. They LIED to her.
Again, you are using emotionally-laden language. Who hired her? Did Dr. Patterson? Is Dr. Patterson obligated to follow the same course of action and philosophy as his predecessor? Does the President have the prerogative of setting the course of the institution? If so, could he not honorably reverse a bad decision of his predecessor? Would Dr. Patterson have been justified in dismissing a homosexual hired by his predecessor? If so, then you are agreed in principle that he has the prerogative and we are just quibbling about when it may be exercised.They were DISHONEST, and then they tried to cover it up and keep it a secret.
Not necessarily. There is not necessarily a causal relationship here because people without faith have done the same.Dr. Klouda kept the secret, and quietly went to another job. That's a testimony to her faith.
This sounds a bit like sarcasm and a bitter spirit. I think you are just venting your spleen.What a great example the leadership of Southwestern Seminary has set for the young men and women (probably a tiny number, considering) who are training for the ministry there. Sounds like a great place to go to seminary, a school that will teach you to lie, treat people with contempt and then try to cover it up.
So, this is the bottom line. You just don’t like Dr. Patterson’s "conservative theology” and you question his integrity, manhood, patriotism, etc. Shame on you! Your post speaks volumes more about your character than Dr. Patterson’s, I think.Is that the definition of "conservative theology"?