Huckabee tells
pastors to take risks
By Jacy Marmaduke
HOUSTON - Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee urged Southern
Baptist pastors to stand firm in their faith even if it means giving up their
churches’ tax-exempt status.
“I think we need to recognize it may be time to quit
worrying so much about the tax code and start thinking more about the truth of
the living God, and if that means we give up our tax-exempt status, I choose
freedom more than I choose a deduction,” the Southern Baptist preacher and
one-time presidential candidate told a crowd of thousands during the 2013
Pastors’ Conference on Monday night. “I never gave a dime to God solely because
it was a tax decision.”
Huckabee made the comments while discussing the IRS’
targeting of conservative political groups, including Christian groups. The
event was held a day before the nation’s largest Protestant denomination has
its annual meeting, where issues of religious freedom will almost surely be
discussed.
In a 40-minute sermon at the close of the conference,
Huckabee lamented that the growing secularization of American society and
proclaimed his allegiance to his faith despite political pressures.
“[Republicans] are saying we evangelicals need to dial it
back,” he said to a crowd in the cavernous exhibit hall of Houston’s George R.
Brown Convention Center. “Well, I’ve got a news flash for the GOP. I plan to
take my last ride in life on a white horse, not an elephant or a donkey. If any
party goes another way, I stick with Jesus. I believe he is forever.”
The former governor and host of the Fox News cable television
show Huckabee said he “didn’t come here to be political,” but his remarks on
hot-button political issues - often met by tidal waves of applause - studded
his sermon. He spoke against same sex marriage, the repeal of the military’s
“Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy and government handouts.
The pastors’ conference precedes the 2013 annual meeting of
the Southern Baptist Convention, which begins today and continues Wednesday.
Thousands will gather from across the United States to discuss issues within
the denomination and to worship together.
But the gathering takes place as membership numbers plummet
for the denomination.
Huckabee described it as an age of “biblical ignorance.”
“We’ve got people who think Adam and Eve were on Season 5 of
Dancing with the Stars, and Daniel in the lion’s den was a special on Nat Geo,”
he said. “And that Paul and John wrote books of the Bible just before they
joined up with George and Ringo to form the Beatles.”
The Southern Baptist preacher said even young evangelicals
have little biblical knowledge, and that it’s time for parents and pastors to
change that. Parents should be raising their children to know the Bible, and
pastors should preach it, he said.
“It’s almost as if we are afraid to be straightforward with
the truth of the Gospel,” he said. “We’re raising an entire generation of young
believers who do not really know the biblical message of marriage, and that
really does concern me.”
Huckabee said these young believers joined with many of
their peers in congratulating professional basketball player Jason Collins when
he announced he was a homosexual.
“They proclaimed him a hero,” he said. “Where are the
accolades for Tim Tebow who follows Jesus? He was told to shut up.”
Children, he said, need someone to lead them and then equip
them to follow Christ.
“We must feed those little children and lead them and equip
them where they can stand on their own and take on hell with a water pistol if
necessary because that’s what they’re facing in this world,” he said.
Huckabee said he wouldn’t urge pastors to turn their pulpits
into a political podium, but it should be used to “deliver a powerful,
prophetic and purposeful punch in the gut to a culture that is ungodly and
unholy.”
“We ought to challenge the culture in which we live, which
has turned it’s back on God,” he said.
June 11, 2013 Arkansas
Democrat-Gazette
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