News

News Briefs: August 15, 1994

* Kenneth Hemphill, 46-year-old director of the Southern Baptist Center for Church Growth, is the unanimous selection of the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary search committee to become the next president of the Fort Worth-based school. Trustees of the largest seminary in the world fired president Russell Dilday by a 26 to 7 vote in March (CT, Apr. 4, 1994, p. 85).

* Jim Bakker is spending six months at a Salvation Army halfway house in Asheville, North Carolina, following his July 1 release from federal prison after four-and-a-half years for mail and wire fraud. Upon his release, Bakker said, “I want to humbly ask for forgiveness to those I have offended or hurt in any way by my sin and arrogant lifestyle.”

* The U.S. Supreme Court on June 30 upheld the legality of a 36-foot buffer zone around a Melbourne, Florida, abortion facility in the Madsen v. Women’s Health Center case (CT, June 20, 1994, p. 48). In a 6-to-3 decision, the Court ruled that judges may create protest-free zones “to ensure the health and well-being” of customers.

* Ballantine Publishing Group has created a new imprint, Moorings, which will eventually publish around 25 new Christian books per year. Bruce Barbour, former vice president of Thomas Nelson, Inc., will be publisher of the Nashville-based Moorings, and Timothy Jones, associate editor at CHRISTIANITY TODAY, will leave his CT post to become managing editor.

* Focus on the Family is launching a 32-page monthly magazine, “Single-Parent Family,” in September. “The ratio of single-parent families to two-parent families is now one to three,” says Focus vice president Dean Merrill. “It’s time to stop calling them ‘broken homes.’ “

* A federal district court jury in June convicted Tony Alamo, an evangelist with a ministry to drug abusers and the homeless, of understating his income for 1985 and failure to file tax returns from 1986 to 1988. Judge Jon McCalla of Memphis ordered Alamo jailed before sentencing August 26, saying he was at risk to flee. McCalla also cited unrelated charges that Alamo had married eight times since last year.

* At its annual convention in Anderson, Indiana, in June, the Church of God (Anderson) passed a resolution criticizing Freemasonry as a “Christless religion” that “uses bloody oaths.” The church relied on writings of James L. Holly, a Southern Baptist critic of Freemasonry (CT, May 17, 1993, p. 81).

* In a 3-to-0 ruling, the Virginia Court of Appeals on June 21 awarded custody of 2-year-old Tyler Doustou to his 24-year-old lesbian mother, Sharon Bottoms. Last September, Circuit Judge Buford Parsons had ruled the woman unfit because she is a lesbian, marking the first time a court had awarded custody to a third party (Bottoms’ mother) because of a parent’s homosexuality (CT, Oct. 25, 1993, p. 79). In the new ruling, Judge Samuel W. Coleman III wrote, “A parent’s private sexual conduct, even if illegal, does not create the presumption of unfitness.”

* Richard G. Champion, 63, who was editor of

“Pentecostal Evangel,”

died of a brain tumor in May. Champion was associated with the magazine for 32 years and once served as president of the Evangelical Press Association.

Copyright © 1994 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

Making Radio Waves: The tumultuous rise of Christian talk radio

Cover Story

Mixing Politics and Piety

John W. Kennedy

The Upside of Pessimism

German Reunification: One-Way Street?

Bill Yoder

Martyrs' Lost Plane Recovered in Ecuador

Kenneth D. MacHarg

A Russian Call to Repentance

Peggy Jackson, with reports from TASS News Service

Christians Blamed for Temple Arson

Global Praise Event Draws 12 Million Believers

Staff reports with News Network International

Prominent Iranian Church Leaders Slain

staff reports with New Network International

'Credibility' Gap Worries Evangelists

Rusty Wright

CRC Vote Overturns Women's Ordination

Randy Frame

Church, Synagogue Build Together

Sexuality Draft Draws Criticism

Timothy C. Morgan

Judge Finds Evangelist Degrauded Heiress

John Stewart in Los Angeles

War Chest Adds Funds Quickly

Tainted Funds Must Be Returned

Soccer Outreach Has Higher Goal

Andres Tapia

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from August 15, 1994

Paul's Prayer Priorities

Homosexual Healing

Refocusing the Family

Tim Stafford, reviewer

Abortion and the Failure of Democracy

Harold O.J. Brown, TEDS, reviewer

Why Christ Was Expelled

Roger Lundin, reviewer

Dr. Death's Dreadful Sermon

Peter J. Bernardi, Catholic priest

Why Jesus' Disciples Wouldn't Wash Their Hands

Networking for Peace

Randall L. Frame

America the Brutal

Caleb Rosado

Behind South Africa's Miracle

Michael Cassidy, African Enterprise

Pro-lifers' New Legal Nightmare

Steven T. McFarland, director of Center for Law and Religious Freedom

Stop Bashing the Christian Right

William Bennett, former sec of education and codirector of Empower America

ABC's Peggy Wehmeyer: On the Faith Beat

View issue

Our Latest

Being Human

Clarissa Moll and Steve Cuss on Power Dynamics, Faith, and Inclusive Leadership

Why did the listener cross the road? To stop fixing and start understanding!

 

Saying ‘Welcome the Stranger’ Is Easy. Hosting a Toddler Is Not.

A conservative pastor I know opened his home to children whose parents were deported. His witness has me examining my comfortable life.

News

Died: Claudette Colvin, Unsung Civil Rights Pioneer

As a teenager, Colvin challenged Montgomery’s segregation law and prevailed.

Seeing Black History Through Scripture

Rann Miller

Similarities between the African American and Jewish experience can help us think biblically about human dignity.

The Russell Moore Show

What Happens When You Look Away from the Minneapolis Shootings

You cannot hide a hardened heart behind the fact that you weren’t the one pulling the trigger.

News

Trump’s Visa Suspension Leaves Adoptive Families in Limbo

Hannah Herrera

The government doesn’t provide a blanket exemption for international adoptions but will examine them case by case.

News

After Their Kids Survived the Annunciation Shooting, Parents Search for Healing

Families in the same Anglican church watched their young children deal with trauma, anxiety, and grief. They found one solution: each other.

News

Kenyan Churches Compete with Bullfights on Sunday Morning

Pius Sawa in Kakamega County, Kenya

As the traditional sport regains popularity, pastors report young people have disconnected from church.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube