15 Million Black Baptists Unite Put Aside Gay-marriage Issue & Focus on Domestic Issues, War in Iraq
Thursday, February 17, 2005 at 12:54AM
TheSpook
Four black Baptist groups whose churches were a training ground for
prominent civil rights leaders but split partly over how that fight
should be waged said Friday they are embarking on a new era of
cooperation meant to put the concerns of their community atop the
national agenda. They are uniting behind an agenda to end the war in
Iraq and refocus the nation's attention on domestic issues. Together
the Nashville-based National Baptist Convention USA, the National
Baptist Convention of America, the Progressive National Baptist
Convention and the National Missionary Baptist Convention represent 15
million mostly African-American Baptists across the United States.They
hope to reclaim their historic role as leaders for broad social change.
Among their top issues will be education, health care, jobs, and
foreign policy. They are now positioning themselves collectively as an
antidote, not just for blacks but for all Americans, to what they call
the narrow moral focus of President George W. Bush and his religious
supporters. Like white evangelicals, black Baptists generally oppose
abortion and consider gay sex immoral. In the presidential race,
Republicans made common cause with some black leaders over blocking gay
marriage, hoping the issue would chip away at the overwhelming black
support for Democrats. However, the Baptist presidents said they would
not highlight either issue for now because the topics are divisive and
not a priority for their members, who face poverty, discrimination, and
other pressing ills. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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