Butterfly Sparks Designs

Monday, September 22, 2008

Pulling it from the shelves

Gospel Today Magazine pulled from LifeWay Bookstores... Read Below!


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Gospel Today

By CHRISTOPHER QUINN

Smiling women on the cover of a slick magazine. Sold from under the counter. Must request it from store clerk.

That’s not something a buyer would typically find in a Christian bookstore. Not unless it’s one of the more than 100 Lifeway Christian Bookstores across the United States, including about six in metro Atlanta.

Gospel Today, the Fayetteville-published magazine, was pulled off the racks by the bookstores’ owner, the Southern Baptist Convention. The problem? The five smiling women on the cover are women of the cloth — church pastors.

Southern Baptist polity says that’s a role reserved for men.

Teresa Hairston, owner of Gospel Today, whose glossy pages feature upbeat articles about health, living, music and ministry, said she discovered by e-mail that the September/October issue of the magazine had been demoted to the realm of the risque.

“It’s really kind of sad when you have people like [Gov.] Sarah Palin and [Sen.] Hillary Clinton providing encouragement and being role models for women around the world that we have such a divergent opinion about women who are able to be leaders in the church,” Hairston said. “I was pretty shocked.”

Chris Turner, a spokesman for Lifeway Resources, which runs the stores for the Southern Baptist Convention, said, “It is contrary to what we believe.”

It bases those beliefs on their interpretation of New Testament Scriptures.

Southern Baptist representatives at national meetings have adopted statements saying women should not be pastors, but each church is independent. A few churches have selected women, such as Decatur First Baptist, where the Rev. Julie Pennington-Russell preaches each Sunday from the pulpit.

Pastor Tamara Bennett of California is one of the featured pastors on the magazine cover and talks in the article about the challenges of breaking through the stained-glass ceiling.

“God’s assignment is that no souls are lost and all are saved,” Bennett said. “Gender is not how God sees it. We are about winning souls, period.”

Southern Baptists are not the only ones to frown on women preachers. Catholics, the largest Christian denomination in the nation, do not allow women priests. And some conservative evangelical groups, such as the Presbyterian Church in America, do not ordain women.

“We weren’t trying to pick a fight,” Hairston said. “We just did a story on an emerging trend in a lot of churches.”



I have several things I would like to say but I will hold my tongue.

Thoughts? Comments?

3 awesome remarks:

Anonymous said...

preach!
With my mom as a minister, being on staff with the ministry I'm involved in, and growing up around women who are ministers - I completely agree with you! I can't believe that some people look past the actual calling of God and give specifications on who can preach and teach the Gospel!

sorry just thought I'd share - obviously I didn't hold my tongue :)

Britany said...

Hello! Our purpose on earth is to witness to others. depending on how you look at it everybody is a preacher. I am a preacher, Shannon is a preacher...
People don't put us in jail because "we are women and we are preaching to the lost" why take a magazine off the shelf that is telling about women who preach to churches full of people?! They really need to be taking Playboy off the shelves and crap like that!!!!!!!! That makes me mad! I'm not really a girl who holds her tongue very often... this is not one of those times!!! If I want to be a preacher, I'm gonna do it, I don't care what the Southern Baptist Convention says... ugh! this makes me very very mad!

p-stip said...

my comment and thought is in complete congruence with your second to last statement.