Wilshire Baptist

Baptists, LGBT Ordination, and the Need for Separation

on December 30, 2016

I grew up in an independent Baptist church years before I knew what any of those words meant. I’ve heard virtually every stereotype about the Baptists: they’re legalistic, ultraconservative, narrow-minded, and even forbid dancing. I became convinced that for all their faults, both real and imagined, we could at least be sure that the world would never see a liberal Baptist. How wrong I was; Wilshire Baptist Church of Dallas Texas, which has a history of taking leftist positions, recently cast a 577-367 vote to grant LGBT people full church membership.

Essentially, this vote allows practicing LGBT members to be “considered for leadership positions, and grant same sex marriages.”

This issue surfaced when a homosexual congregant was repeatedly nominated for a deacon position, only for said nomination to be obstructed by church bylaws. This, combined with the number of out-of-the-closet gays and lesbians in the congregation’s ranks, compelled the church to devote itself to fourteen weeks of study of the topic, which culminated in the aforementioned vote.

So far this seems like a rank-and-file episode of apostasy in a local church that has been consumed by the homosexual agenda.

However, there are two items that stand out about this case.

First, this decision to allow the ordination of unrepentant LGBT congregants did not come without backlash. The church lost “more than a few” members for merely studying the issue of LGBT ordination.

Wilshire Baptist also took heat from the Baptist General Convention of Texas (BGCT), who threatened to sever ties with Wilshire for its departure from the scriptural position. While the autonomous character of Baptist churches insulates Wilshire, this threat can obstruct Wilshire’s ability to participate in mission work with the BGCT.

Second, the Wilshire leadership echoed two common – but false – memes that must be addressed.

Senior Pastor George Mason explained that the vote displays the truth that “the Gospel is open to all and closed to none.”

The implication of this statement is that churches are not making “the gospel open to all” if they do not bend scripture’s clear teachings on ordaining people who unrepentantly engage in biblically prohibited sexual conduct (1 Timothy 3:1–13).

This is ludicrous. Wilshire Baptist Church was open to LGBT persons prior to its decision to allow the ordination of LGBT congregants, as evidenced by the fact that it allowed gays and lesbians to occupy its doors. Furthermore, one makes the Gospel open to everyone with the universal call to repentance, rather than telling people their sin is acceptable to God (I Cor. 6:9-11, Acts 17:30-31).

The Wilshire leadership’s second meme is articulated in Associate Pastor Mark Wingfield’s lament that BGCT is willing to “turn away our direct contribution of hunger offering money because they disagree…on the inclusion of persons who identify in the LGBT community.”

Wingfield is essentially saying that conservative Baptists would let the poor go hungry before they would “include” the LGBT community in the church.

This is a common accusation the Religious Left lays at the feet of conservatives and it is not only false, but can be easily flipped on them.

First, nothing is stopping Wilshire from taking up its own hunger offering and using it for the local ministry to the poor.

Second, the Religious Left in general and Wilshire in particular shoot themselves in the foot with this argument.

If anyone is responsible for trampling the poor in this situation it is they.

The conservative believers were more than happy to work with Wilshire Baptist Church to help the poor. It was the latter party who broke the relationship.

By Mason’s own admission, Wilshire Baptist Church “knows that there are consequences of [their] decision.”

Despite this knowledge, they chose to depart from God’s clear commands regarding sexual immorality (I Cor. 6:9-10) and leadership positions (1 Timothy 3:1–13).

This is not a case of conservatives stubbornly holding to personal traditions at the expense of the LGBT community. This is Wilshire Baptist Church attempting to slander God by putting words in His mouth at the expense of the poor.

Put simply, they sacrificed both the word of God and their chance to help the needy on the altar of LGBT “inclusiveness.”

God gave strict orders in Romans 16:17 (NASB) to “keep your eye on those who cause dissensions and hindrances contrary to the teaching which you learned, and turn away from them.”[Emphasis Added]

Orthodox Bible-believing Christians bear no responsibility for the tragic consequences of excommunications of and separations from apostates who attempt to replace the clear teaching of scripture with heresy, be it leftist or otherwise.

Blaming conservatives for the tragic consequences of Wilshire’s apostasy is like blaming a father for grounding his son for his disobedience.

The guilt in such matters falls solely on those who broke from God’s word. May they repent so they can again join hands with their Baptist brothers in aiding the downtrodden.

  1. Comment by Bruce9 on January 2, 2017 at 3:59 pm

    Misunderstandings
    1) “christian”
    2) “baptist”
    3) “repentance”
    4) “obedience”
    5) “changed heart”
    6) “changed life”

  2. Comment by Nutstuyu on January 3, 2017 at 3:14 pm

    Will these same liberals be open to ALL sexual orientations or just the popular ones? Pansexuals, pedosexuals, polysexuals, omnisexuals, necrosexuals, fratrisexuals, zoosexuals want “inclusion” too.

  3. Comment by Joe's World. on January 3, 2017 at 5:57 pm

    This is a nice story. It’s not often we see Christians doing the right thing. Rejoice, perhaps the religion can be saved!

  4. Comment by Garden of Love on January 3, 2017 at 8:26 pm

    On the contrary, Christianity does not condone sexual sin. The churches that have embraced homosexuality are all losing members by the thousands. The acceptance of homosexuality is not only in conflict with the Bible, but it is a proven path to loss of members. When homosexuals infiltrate the church, the Christians head for the exits. On the plus side, this has greatly benefitted traditional Christian churches.

  5. Comment by LarryECollins on January 6, 2017 at 6:38 pm

    Well said. And accurate.

  6. Comment by Richard S. Bell on January 6, 2017 at 10:56 pm

    I am a conservative evangelical Christian. Like Mr Ballas and most of you, I agree that 1 Cor. 6:9-10 contains some of “God’s clear commands regarding sexual immorality.” But unlike Mr Ballas and most of you, I deny that those commands make homosexual relations immoral for persons who are married to each other. Unlike Mr Ballas and most of you, I deny that God’s moral will revealed in scripture forbids same-sex marriage.
    Applying traditional principles of interpretation that allow none of the ridiculous arguments usually made by liberal revisionists, I can prove that I am right about this. If your mind is even slightly open and if you have tolerance for rather scholarly writing, ask me for a digital copy of my essay on the subject and I will be happy to send it attached to my reply.
    This is not a phishing expedition. This is an offer from a brother in Christ who is grieved because God is grieved by his Church’s refusal to celebrate marriages of homosexuals just as it celebrates marriages of heterosexuals.
    My email address is rsbell@ameritech.net.

  7. Comment by AustinRocks on January 10, 2017 at 7:06 pm

    You can’t have it both ways. No dice.

  8. Comment by Richard S. Bell on January 12, 2017 at 1:46 pm

    I cannot understand your reply. I do not know what you call “it” and so I do not have an inkling of what either of the “ways” is.
    But I can understand the implication of your reply: your mind is not even slightly open. Alas, this is usual among traditionalists and revisionists. I disagree with both camps, but I find very few members of either willing and able to discuss their views.

  9. Comment by Sue Abbott on July 23, 2017 at 1:00 pm

    What is the moral and scriptural rationale of separating sexual activity from its procreative dynamic? Is any experience we feel intense desire to experience a part of who we are? There are those who desire homosexual activity but want biological children of their own. Some of these people pay surrogates to bear a child or artificially inseminate. The resulting children never have the experience of being raised by a mother and a father or feeling the roots of knowing about the people who gave them life, should death or divorce intervene. How do churches explain this as part of God’s plan for His children?

  10. Comment by James on December 16, 2018 at 5:45 pm

    I have a feeling some of the original Apostles would say something like… Rejoice! in our sufferings. That a great sifting is happening. Pretenders are being exposed.
    I have always been stunned by the number of *professing Christians verses what we actually experience in everyday life. The 2 don’t jive.
    Fake Christians destroy the faith and we are now at a time where they can no longer hide.
    They will expose themselves & when you hear these apostates speak.. they sound no different than the disgruntled liberal unbelievers who hate the God of the Bible.
    The Church is not a building. The real church can never be hurt.

  11. Comment by Trevor Sisk on June 3, 2020 at 1:56 pm

    The problem is you keep telling me i can grow by cut off arm back. I tell you i can’t and you call me a liar. I cannot change my sexual orientation anymore than you can change yours and forcing me to do feels the same as it would if someone forced you to do so. I really is that simple and that cruel. God did not create me with one arm and then for the rest of my life demand that I grow another.

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