southern baptist

CANTON, Ga. (ABP) — A Southern Baptist megachurch is at the center of a potential legal battle over the constitutionality of public schools holding graduation exercises in a church building.

The Cherokee County Board of Education voted Dec. 2 to table for one month a vote on whether to move the county’s high-school graduation ceremonies from First Baptist Church in Woodstock, Ga., to a non-religious alternative site. According to local media, current board members concurred the school district would be in a better position for litigation if the vote is delayed until after three new board members are sworn in Jan. 20.

Cherokee County, originally a part of Cherokee Indian territory but now in Atlanta’s burgeoning suburbs, is one of the fastest-growing counties in the nation. Since 2005, district high schools have held graduations in the sanctuary of the 17,000-member congregation led by former Southern Baptist Convention president Johnny Hunt.

In October, 2009, attorneys for Americans United for Separation of Church and State wrote school officials, advising them that it is unconstitutional to hold a public-high-school commencement ceremony in a church and asking that future graduation exercises be held in secular locations.

Even though attendance at graduation is technically voluntary, lawyers said, requiring students to go to a church to receive their diplomas is a form of religious coercion not permitted under the First Amendment’s ban on establishing religion. Architectural features including a large cross displayed above where the students would receive their diplomas, they said, made it even more likely that non-Christian students would be exposed to unwanted expressions of religion.

School officials proposed a compromise, saying other venues of comparable size to the church cost far more and offering to utilize disclaimers that using the church is not an endorsement of a particular religion. Americans United responded that a school district’s desire for a larger or cheaper facility could not legitimize what would be otherwise a constitutional violation and that the Constitution prohibits not only conduct that has a religious purpose but also conduct that has a religious effect.

A Cherokee Tribune report of the Dec. 2 meeting said a comment by one parent that the school board should not allow an outside group to “impose their will on us” and “intimidate us” drew applause from a standing-room-only crowd in attendance.

A local rabbi asked administrators to consider the rights of non-Christians. While in the United States the majority rules, he said, “it cannot be at the peril of the minority.” The debate isn’t between Christians and non-Christians, he added, but about what is “morally and ethically” correct.

Hunt, the church’s pastor said Dec. 3 that he doesn’t have a comment on the debate at this time. “I feel the decision is in the hands of the school board,” he related via e-mail.

The Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty says holding graduation ceremonies in houses of worship is common in some communities, particularly in rural areas where a local church may be only space large enough to accommodate a crowd. When it involves people of differing faiths, however, constitutional questions can arise.

In May, a federal judge in Connecticut ordered a school district to move graduation ceremonies for two high schools from a church to a secular setting.

U.S. District Judge Janet Hall said Enfield Public Schools’ decision to hold graduations in a church violated the First Amendment and sent the message to students that the schools favor religion over non-religion and one religious belief over others.

A Wisconsin federal judge in 2009 ruled just the opposite, holding that a school district did not violate the Establishment Clause by holding graduation and senior honors ceremonies at a Christian church.

Chief U.S. District Judge C.N. Clevert said the Elmbrook Joint Common School District’s decision to use the church was not coercive, did not constitute endorsement of a religion and did not excessively entangle church and state. He also rejected an argument that using taxpayer funds to rent facilities from a church was a violation of the Establishment Clause.

The Baptist Joint Committee says that while all graduations scheduled for religious venues are not veiled attempts to proselytize, graduation ceremonies should be held in a non-religious venue whenever possible.

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is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press.


Article source: http://baptistis.com/2010/12/04/southern-baptist-congregation-center-church-state-dispute/

Original Article source: http://www.abpnews.com/content/view/5929/53/

Posted on Nov 4, 2010 | by Barbara Denman

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (BP)–An embattled Haiti is bracing for Tropical Storm Tomas, which is expected to strengthen into a hurricane before its projected hit Friday, Nov. 5.

In the 10 months since the Jan. 12 earthquake, Haitians have lived in fear of two potential threats, with more than 1.3 million homeless in unsanitary and unstable tent cities: disease and hurricanes in the tropical climate.

After a possible nationwide outbreak of cholera was contained to the city of St. Marc in October, now the hurricane is certain to bring destructive winds and flash flooding.

Those living in tent cities are most at risk. What the strong winds do not destroy, the floodwaters will, as thousands of tents line riverbanks and low-lying areas.

Florida and Southern Baptist disaster relief teams on the ground in Port-au-Prince are making preparations for the worst, said Eddie Blackmon, Haiti Rebuild coordinator for Southern Baptist Disaster Relief.

“We are sending two medical teams from Pensacola back to the U.S., getting our water supplies together in a safe place and filling up our vehicles with gas, much like we do when a hurricane is threatening Florida,” said Blackmon. Construction materials being used to rebuild homes also are being secured, he noted.

Although media reports suggest that the government is moving people out of the tent cities, Blackmon said he had driven through the tent cities in Port-au-Prince during the past two days and “seen no movement. My biggest concern is for the people in the tent cities.”

“There is really no place for them to go,” Blackmon added. “If there were, the government would have moved them before now.”

Fritz Wilson, incident commander of the Haiti earthquake response and Florida Baptist disaster relief director, reported that the convention has 17 tons of rice positioned in warehouses across Haiti, with pastors trained for making distributions if needed.

“We have our supplies and resources on the ground,” Wilson said.

“In God’s timing,” he said, “next week we are scheduled to take more than 4,000 Buckets of Hopes to Jeremie and Les Cayes,” towns in southwestern Haiti where the hurricane is likely to hit. Each bucket, packed by Southern Baptist hands, contains enough food to feed a Haitian family for more than a week.

Florida Baptists, working in partnership with the 1,000 churches of the Confraternite Missionaries Baptiste d’Haiti, have responded to eight disasters in the past 15 years

Florida Baptists shipped bottled water and water purification filters to St. Marc in late October to help stem the cholera outbreak in that city, located about 60 miles northwest of Port-au-Prince.

The supplies were sent after Fritz Albert, director of missions of Haiti’s Artibonne Baptist Association, issued a plea of help.

“Pastor Albert asked if there was anything we could do to help provide pure water for churches in the St. Marc area,” said Blackmon, who is stationed at the Florida Baptist Mission House in Port-au-Prince. “The outbreak has scared everyone in the area, making them afraid to drink any water.”

Cholera, a bacterial infection of the small intestines, can cause vomiting and diarrhea so severe it can kill victims from dehydration within days. The disease is spread through contaminated water, food and poor sanitation.

Volunteers from First Baptist and Hillcrest churches in Pensacola traveled to Haiti on Saturday, Oct. 30, with 30 water purification drip-type filters that can be installed on five-gallon buckets to help stem the lack of pure drinking water.

Additionally $30,000 was earmarked to purchase water in Port-au-Prince to be shipped to St. Marc.

Albert dispensed the water and purification filters to the churches for distribution to families in their communities.

Despite the outbreak, Florida Baptist Convention officials released a statement to their churches encouraging mission volunteers to continue with scheduled plans.

Blackmon reported that the Pensacola medical teams treated 800 patients during the week of Oct. 24-30 and another 600 patients before being sent home.
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Barbara Denman is director of communications for the Florida Baptist Convention.

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