CEANet2036: SBC is Taking a New Direction in Education
DEAR EXODUS MANDATE FRIENDS:
This is latest Exodus Mandate news release also distributed by
our colleague Jim Boyes with CEANet. Please forward this to your
local Christian and secular media and urge them to call for Dr
Bruce Shortt or TC. Pinckney, BG USAF Ret to give a media interview.
Further, it would be helpful if you could write Dr Morris Chapman
and thank him for this bold and great stand on behalf of our children
and for more K-12 Christian education within the SBC. Let you
own pastor know of your support for Dr Morris Chapman too. THIS
IS IMPORTANT. Blessings (E. Ray Moore, Chaplain (Lt.Col.) USAR
Ret at www.Exodusmandate.org)
From: James Boyes <jmboyes@whidbey.net>
Subject: CEANet2036: SBC is Taking a New Direction in Education
To: "CEANet" <jmboyes@whidbey.net>
Date: Wednesday, June 3, 2009, 9:40 PM
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Christian Education Awareness Network (CEANet)
Message 2036
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Internet: http://www2.whidbey.net/jmboyes
E-mail: jmboyes@whidbey.net
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Members of CEANet,
I'd like to share with you, a message I recently received from
Dr. Bruce Shortt of Exodus Mandate.
Thanks and God Bless,
Jim at CEANet
To all: What follows is Exodus Mandate's press release regarding
Dr. Morris Chapman's call for a radical expansion of Christian
k-12 education by the SBC. Because Dr. Chapman is effectively
the CEO of the SBC, this means that action will be taken (note
that this is vastly more important than passing a resolution -
it is a call to action by someone who can make that action happen).
Note that Dr. Chapman wrote before the Obama administration made
Kevin Jennings, the founder of GLSEN, an organization that promotes
the lifestyle of homosexual sodomy in middle schools and high
schools by creating homosexual "clubs", and before the
Dalai Bama proclaimed June to be sexual perversion month.Those
facts alone will make it difficult for other leaders in the SBC
to criticize Chapman for essentially laying out the first steps
of an exit strategy from the government schools. (note by Dr Bruce
Shortt, Exodus Mandate Board member)
The Southern Baptist Convention is Finally 'Throwing in the
Towel' on Government Schools
President and Executive Director of the SBC Executive Committee
Proposes Major Expansion of Christian Schools by Churches
Contact: Exodus Mandate, 803-714-1744
COLUMBIA, SC, June 2 /Christian Newswire/ -- In 2004 Brig. Gen.
T.C. Pinckney, USAF Ret. and former 2nd Vice President of the
SBC, and Dr. Bruce Shortt, Houston attorney, opened a debate over
education by submitting a resolution to the Annual Meeting of
the Southern Baptist Convention urging Baptists to remove their
children from government schools and, instead, give them a Christian
education.
Although the Pinckney/Shortt Resolution was met with howls of
execration from many Christian leaders, and the Resolutions Committee
prevented it from being voted on by the Annual Meeting, the Resolution
initiated an important debate over education, both inside and
outside the SBC.
Despite the Pinckney/Shortt Resolution's hostile reception, in
2005 Dr. Albert Mohler, President of the SBC's "flagship"
seminary, Southern Theological Seminary, called for the SBC to
develop an "exit strategy" from the government's schools.
(www.albertmohler.com/commentary_read.php?cdate=2005-06-17) Since
then other Christian leaders have endorsed, in part or in whole,
the call to provide Christian children with a Christian education.
Now, the SBC has come full circle. In an article that recently
appeared in The Baptist Messenger, Dr. Morris H. Chapman, president
and chief executive officer of the Southern Baptist Convention's
Executive Committee, called for churches to provide many more
Christian elementary and secondary schools as alternatives to
the government's schools. (www.baptistmessenger.com/story/11E2669E88B513F2EAC03509EACA78D3)
The anti-Christian moral teaching within government schools was
among Dr. Chapman's chief motivations for calling for a major
expansion of Christian education: "In far too many public
schools throughout the country our children are being bombarded
with secular reasoning, situational ethics and moral erosion."
Moreover, Dr. Chapman sees the need for greatly expanding Christian
education as urgent: "In recent days, two questions have
weighed heavily on my soul. If Southern Baptists don't do it,
who will? If we don't do it now, do we risk forever losing the
opportunity to build schools for God's glory and the future of
our children, grandchildren and the land we love?"
To implement his vision of a major expansion of Christian education,
Dr. Chapman advocates two initial concrete steps. First, he identifies
the inner cities as places where a Christian education ministry
is much needed and would be welcomed. As Dr. Chapman sees it:
"In such areas, Kingdom schools would serve as a central
ministry among a myriad of ministries that would help families
recover from the chaos that now exists and help them establish
Christ in the home."
Second, Dr. Chapman calls on every local Baptist association to
create new schools: "Why shouldn't we have at least one Christian
school in every association that merges dynamic biblical principles
with academic excellence? At minimum, a number of Southern Baptist
churches in the same association could band together to create
an outstanding Christian school for the area. In our voluntary
fellowships with each other, Southern Baptists still have shown
themselves uniquely structured and resourced to take on such a
challenge. Elementary and secondary education is an area we can
add to how we cooperate in missions and ministries."
Dr. Chapman's proposal has been warmly welcomed by Dr. Shortt,
the co-sponsor of the 2004 education resolution and of education
resolutions in 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008: "As the chief
administrator of the SBC, Dr. Chapman's voice is extremely powerful.
With his recent call to greatly expand Christian education among
Southern Baptists and others, Dr. Chapman has, in effect, laid
out the first step in the "exit strategy" called for
by Dr. Mohler in 2005. All Christians should note this sea-change
in sentiment within the SBC. The spiritual, moral, and intellectual
pathologies of the government school system are now obvious even
to casual observers. Christian parents and pastors need to ask
themselves just how much longer they intend to render our children
to Caesar's spiritually dark, morally decaying, and physically
dangerous government schools."
E. Ray Moore of Exodus Mandate expressed his hearty agreement:
"Dr. Morris Chapman's clarion call for a major expansion
of Christian elementary and secondary schools is an example of
bold leadership, not only for the SBC, but for the entire Christian
community. This could not have come at a more opportune moment
when families are crying out for assistance with their children
and churches are losing the next generation of youth to worldliness,
humanism and post modernism due to public schooling. In the last
several decades, Christian organizations and publishers have created
excellent curriculum materials and online Christian education
programs that will work for small or large churches as well as
for home school families. Technology combined with good curriculum
have made K-12 Christian education available to anyone anywhere
anytime and at reasonable cost."
Additional information and the text of Dr. Shortt's 2009 resolution
in support of Dr. Chapman's proposal can be found at www.exodusmandate.org.
To schedule an interview with Dr. Bruce Shortt or Chaplain E.
Ray Moore (Lt. Col., USAR Ret.) call Exodus Mandate at 803-714-1744
(www.exodusmandate.org).
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