The Missouri Baptist Convention is considering the use of Cooperative Program funding to pay legal fees in their ongoing lawsuits attempting to regain the entities that were stolen from them. Ethics Daily has produced articles alleging that the MBC has already used CP funds to pay for legal fees. These articles bemoaned the use of missions money for the pursuit of these legal initiatives.
I, too, mourn to think that any Cooperative Program money should be employed to fund lawsuits between Christians. The primary problem is not that CP funding will go toward the legal fees, for CP money always has and always will go to a wide variety of general and administrative costs associated with our missionary enterprise. Part of the intended design of the Cooperative Program is to cover such costs. Lawyers have received CP dollars many times in the past for defending Southern Baptist entities from legal threats, and they will continue to do so in the future. Most of those instances do not earn much in the way of headlines, but they occur with an inexorable regularity.
The problem is not where the money originates, but rather that the lawsuit exists at all. The Bible is plainspoken in 1 Corinthians 6:1-7, commanding us not to take fellow Christians to secular courts. This has been my opinion all along regarding the unfortunate events in Missouri. The folks over at Ethics Daily have contacted SBC Today to indicate their dismay over the potential use of CP money to fund the lawsuit. These conversations have posed something of a dilemma for me. On the one hand, I am not a fan of the lawsuits. On the other hand, the reporting by Ethics Daily and the Baptist General Convention of Missouri is potentially self-serving and might not be motivated strictly out of a love for the Cooperative Program and a desire for reconciliation.
If the good folks at the BGCM and Ethics Daily are working out of the same concerns that I have, it will be easy enough to show it. A simple and fair path exists for those at Ethics Daily, the Baptist General Convention of Missouri, the Missouri Baptist Convention, and the renegade entities. 1 Corinthians 6:2 asks, “If the world is judged by you, are you not competent to constitute the smallest law courts?” Three verses later we read, “I say this to your shame. Is it so, that there is not among you one wise man who will be able to decide between his brethren…?” The biblical manner for resolving this sort of difficulty is for God’s people in the churches to settle the matter, rather than potential unbelievers in the courts.
Therefore, I call upon all of the agencies involved in the Missouri discussion to convene messengers from all of the churches that were a part of the Missouri Baptist Convention in 2000 according to the messenger formula in place in 2000. If Ethics Daily is genuinely alarmed about CP money being spent upon unbiblical lawsuits, then let them encourage the involved parties all to agree to binding arbitration by which the majority of messengers convened in this meeting shall be able to decide finally and irrevocably the disposition of the matters disputed in the lawsuits.
This is the biblical manner for resolving these questions, and I am confident that the Lord will be honored when all of those involved commit to follow this approach.


