The agency that commissions Southern Baptist military chaplains says
no Baptist chaplain will be allowed to perform, attend or support a
same-sex wedding either on or off base.
The Southern Baptist Convention’s North American Mission Board
released guidelines on Aug. 29 stating that endorsed chaplains will not
“offer any kind of relationship training or retreat, on or off of a
military installation, that would give the appearance of accepting the
homosexual lifestyle or sexual wrongdoing.”
The updated guidelines were issued in response to the military’s
repeal of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy and the Supreme Court’s
decision this summer to strike down the Defense of Marriage Act.
“A lot of our chaplains were asking for clarification,” said Mike
Ebert, spokesman for the NAMB, which is based outside Atlanta. “We
wanted to clearly articulate in writing for the Department of Defense
that these are our expectations.”
Last year, an Associated Press article included mention of a 20-year
Southern Baptist Air Force chaplain who attended a same-sex wedding on
his base. Col. Timothy Wagoner initially assured his NAMB superiors that
his quotes were misunderstood. He later resigned his Southern Baptist
Convention endorsement and was re-endorsed by the Cooperative Baptist
Fellowship.
Ebert said that Wagoner’s case was the only one he knew of where a
Southern Baptist-endorsed chaplain had left the chaplaincy over a gay
wedding.
Southern Baptists have nearly 1,500 endorsed chaplains serving
in the U.S. military, more than any other denomination or faith group.
Earlier this week, the Pentagon began allowing gay and lesbian
service members who plan to wed to take travel leaves for up to 10 days
as long as those service members live 100 miles or more away from one of
the 13 states that allow same-sex marriages.
A
19-year evangelical Air Force veteran says he was relieved of duties at
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, after a dispute with his commanding
officer over gay marriage.
Senior Master Sgt. Phillip Monk said his
commander, who is a lesbian, tried to pressure him into agreeing that
opposition to gay marriage is a form of discrimination.
Monk said he
declined to answer her based on his convictions.
Last year, Congress approved conscience protections for military
members, allowing them to express their personal beliefs without fear of
punishment.
Pending versions of the 2014 defense authorization bill
would expand the conscience protections for service members.
Earlier this year NAMB President Kevin Ezell joined a statement of
concern about the religious liberty of military chaplains, including
ambiguity about the military’s distinction between “evangelism” and
“proselytizing.”