Former SBC President Dr. Frank Page allowed me the honor of serving on the 2008 Southern Baptist Resolutions Committee. The work was hard and the hours long but the reward of working with some of the finest, most articulate leaders in the Convention made the experience one I will remember for a lifetime. All in all, the committee spent about thirty hours meticulously reading all of the resolutions submitted for consideration pairing the final number down to nine. From the defense of the term Christmas against the encroachment of a secular culture to recognizing Israels sixty years of survival in the face of tenacious enemies dedicated to her destruction, the committee attempted to address some of the pressing social issues of our day.
One such issue was the California Supreme Court decision to overturn the will of the people and allow homosexual couples to marry. On March 7, 2000, the people of California voted overwhelmingly (61.4%) in favor of Proposition 22 which affirmed, Only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California. On May 15 of this year, a sharply divided Court (4 to 3) overturned the will of the people setting the stage for same-sex marriages to begin. On June 16th, state officials began issuing marriage licenses at approximately 5pm local time.
This is not the first time the Southern Baptist Convention has passed a resolution condemning homosexual marriage. Southern Baptists have addressed this issue many times in the last few years with the first resolution affirming the traditional family passing in 1980. The Convention spoke directly to the issue of same-sex marriage in 2003, resolving to continue to oppose steadfastly all efforts by any court or state legislature to validate or legalize same-sex marriage or other equivalent unions. Since Southern Baptists have spoken definitively and consistently (ten times in the past seventeen years) expressing the collective will of the messengers concerning same-sex marriage, why speak again in 2008?
The answer can be expressed in one word .portability. Massachusetts same-sex marriage law requires that all persons applying for a same-sex marriage license must be a resident of the state. California has no such law. Beginning June 16th, unless the court intervenes to suspend the law until California voters have their say in November defining marriage constitutionally, homosexual couples from any state in the union can travel to California, marry, return to their home state and challenge that states marriage laws under the full faith and credit clause of the United States Constitution. The result will be chaos in the courts and confusion in the home as our cultural and biblical understanding of the family rapidly discentegrates.
To fight this latest attempt of an activist court to force its liberal will on an unwilling electorate the messengers of the 2008 Southern Baptist Convention meeting in Indianapolis, Indiana resolved to encourage all Christian pastors in California and in every other state to speak strongly and prophetically concerning the sinful nature of homosexuality and the urgent need to protect biblical marriage in accordance with Gods Word. We also called on believers everywhere to pray for the people of California as they seek to right this terrible wrong that has been forced upon them, and to pray for the people of every state where biblical marriage in under attack. It should be obvious now to even the most ardent states rights adherent that the only way we are going to ultimately protect the biblical, cultural, and foundational institution of marriage is with a national marriage amendment. Continue »










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