Posted on 07/15/2005 5:22:32 AM PDT by rhema
This was coming.....and needed to. Prayers that the university will return to its First Love.
As a former Baylor student, this infighting is no surprise.
All one needs to do is look at the turmoil at Louisville's Southern Seminary over the last ten years. Baptists might in fact split in the coming years.
Am I interpreting your comment correctly if I deduce that Jeffrey had a better vision for what needs to be done at Baylor than Underwood does?
all Baylor faculty just received $1,000 bonus...
I'd say the new President is at least heading in the right direction :)
Would some of the departing Baylor staff liken the largesse to a payoff involving 30 pieces of silver?
FYI
Your assignment: Diagram this sentence!
Dr. O'Brien was an interim pastor at our church several years ago. His promotion is a step in the right direction.
I'm running errands with my wife in a few minutes, but I'll try to tackle it later today. There are about three adjective clauses at initial glance.
The best vision for Baylor is only that from the LORD.
I see one of the faculty who is considering leaving Baylor is sociologist Rodney Stark. His work on early Christian history is well respected in scholarly circles while at the same time it has strengthened the case for important evangelical goals. If Baylor was trying for that kind of excellence, it's hard to see where it was failing.
Now try to get any three Baptists to agree on what his vision is.
So9
Baylor can probably be counted on to be on the liberal side of the split. They started a new theology school because Southwestern was too conservative for the BGCT.
OK, I'm back from my errands to take a shot at it.
As far as I can tell, there's a main clause (Why should they want to remain at a university), an adjective clause modifying "university" (whose president has dismissed the man), another adjective clause modifying "man" (who embodied the Christian scholarly excellence), and a final adjective clause modifying "excellence" (that brought them to Baylor). In grammar terms, it's a complex sentence, whose definition is one main clause plus two or more subordinate clauses.
If you like, I can break individual clauses down further (subjects, verbs, direct objects, adverb and adjective prepositional phrases, etc.), but we might both be in danger of suffering grammar overload at that point.
Very taxing on the working memory.
Actually, they started a new theology school because a bunch of power-hungry politicos disguised as conservatives took over Southwestern. I was squarely in the middle of the meltdown in the 1980s and early 1990s and had many good, conservative, Bible-believing friends lose their jobs at Southwestern. It wasn't because they had liberal theological leanings but rather because they refused to sign on politically with the thugs (there's no other word to describe them) who had hijacked the Southern Baptist Convention.
Unfortunately, many people who didn't have a ringide seat thought that the issue was conservative theology versus liberal theology. It wasn't over theology at all -- it was a lust for power.
We've exchanged opposing views on this subject before, in greater detail, so rather than re-hash, let's just say that we disagree.
That's fine. But remember, I was there and I saw what happened.
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