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Texas Baptists Committed to seek new leader Print E-mail
By Ken Camp   
Wednesday, September 23, 2009

SAN ANGELO, Texas (ABP) -- Texas Baptists Committed, formed as a political organization two decades ago to resist a “fundamentalist takeover” of the Baptist General Convention of Texas, soon will be seeking a new executive director and relocating its office.

David Currie, a San Angelo rancher who has led Texas Baptists Committed since its inception, will be named executive director emeritus, and the organization will move its office to the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

The organization’s board will appoint a committee to search for a new executive director and will seek a church in the Dallas-Fort Worth area to provide office space.

Currie announced the move in his “Rancher’s Rumblings” e-mail newsletter, also posted on the Texas Baptists Committed website.

“Much of (Texas Baptists Committed’s) work involves working with the Baptist General Convention of Texas -- keeping folks informed about the work of BGCT institutions, agencies, and universities, and also acting as a watchdog in relation to BGCT policies and actions,” he wrote. Moving the offices to the Dallas-Fort Worth area, he said, would improve access to the BGCT Executive Board offices.

Announcing that he would “step down as executive director,” Currie said he will continue to write his column, travel and speak on behalf of Texas Baptists Committed.

“However, I will give up day-to-day oversight of the (Texas Baptists Committed) office and operations, and I am thrilled about this,” he wrote.

Texas Baptists Committed “continues to have a vital ministry in Baptist life, but … (the organization) needs to move forward on initiatives that meet the new challenges of 21st-century Baptist life, and much of that work is the type of work for which I don’t have the training or -- to be honest -- even the desire to do,” Currie said.

Currie said he would continue in the executive director’s position until a new leader is chosen and on the job. “At that point, I will move to emeritus status, and the new executive director will then hire his or her own support staff,” he said.

At its apex of influence, Texas Baptists Committed succeeded in mobilizing thousands of messengers from churches around the state to attend BGCT annual meetings to elect a series of candidates endorsed by the organization. Those candidates included the state convention’s first Hispanic, African-American and female presidents.

Last year, Texas Baptists Committed agreed to refrain from endorsing any candidates for BGCT office.

In recent years, as the organization has experienced financial hardship and endured questions as to its continued reason for being, the group has tried to shift from its previous role of political organizing to a new identity as promoter of BGCT ministries and institutions, as well as a voice for historic Baptist principles.

Currie served from 1988 to 1990 as field coordinator for Baptists Committed to the SBC, a national organization of Baptist moderates that developed into Texas Baptists Committed. Since 2000, he has worked as a consultant with the national Mainstream Baptist Network.

Prior to that, he worked as a special projects coordinator with the Southern Baptist Christian Life Commission in Nashville, Tenn., as pastor of First Baptist Church in Mason, Texas, and as a special assistant to the director of the Texas Department of Agriculture.

He has been a managing partner of a 2,700 sheep and cattle ranch in Concho County since 1968. Since 1995, he also has been president of Cornerstone Builders, a custom home building company in San Angelo.

Currie is a graduate of Howard Payne University, and he earned master of divinity and doctor of philosophy degrees from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

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Comments (4)Add Comment
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written by Jesdisciple, September 23, 2009
> formed as a political organization ... to resist a “fundamentalist takeover”

I know that some tend to put others on the defensive with unloving rants and even lies. I know that in our society politics is like the Aggie's duct tape. But can we please attempt unity despite disagreement? Even teamwork?

John 13:35
"By this all will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another."

Is the one about loving your enemies even relevant here? I hope not.
possible drama
written by Xenophon, September 24, 2009
As Texas Baptists Committed moves to Dallas/Fort Worth, there will be increased opportunities for open and friendly debate between "moderates" and Evangelicals. Perhaps a series of debates could be arranged between Texas Baptists Committed and the faculty of Criswell College, ministers from First Baptist Dallas and Prestonwood Baptist, faculty at Southwestern and Dallas Theological Seminary.

I think it is best to get the differences out on the table and have it out in a respectful but forthright way. I am not sure that I am sure of a lot of the differences between the different factions in the Southern Baptist Convention including the Southern Baptists of Texas and the Baptist General Convention of Texas. I do not know what Aggie's Duct tape is either.
...
written by mcskinny, September 25, 2009
Why do you think it was called a "takeover"? Fundamentalist in one way or another got rid of anyone who disagreed with their leaders, their theology and their politics. The suggestions of trying to get along and understand the "other side" is actually the way the SBC and Texas Baptists were in the past. Trying to "get along" was used as a major tool to gain control.
Under the leadership of men like David Currie, Texas Baptists Committed has done a good job of keeping interested Baptist informed about some of the things going on in Baptist life which would have gone unreported without men and women like them. Otherwise today's Southern Baptists would begin to think it was the "moderates" who caused the trouble to begin with as Fundies re-wrote Texas and Southern Baptist history..

Charlie Mac (Christian and Southern Baptist since the mid-1940's)
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written by Jesdisciple, September 27, 2009
Xenophon: The joke is that Aggies (A&M students and alumni) believe duct tape can fix anything.

And I'm not necessarily thinking of cooperation at the state level, at least to begin with. Try engaging the fundies in your neighborhood with cooperative projects. I should think they would vote for you after that, making large-scale cooperation easier.

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