Pastor accused of using racial slurs
Nov 23, 2012 | 5769 views | 2 2 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Jack Latta

Heartland News Service

JACK’S CREEK — Several members of a local church have appealed to the Southern Baptist Convention, after they say their pastor has on three occasions used racially insensitive language.

Ozark Slone, Burman Newman, Freddy Johnson and Mary Hall say that the repeated use of of derogatory racial slurs by their pastor, Rev. Paul Grainger, has made members uncomfortable, and even driven some to leave the Jack’s Creek Baptist Church.

In a letter sent to the Southern Baptist Convention, the group contends that “the local Southern Baptist Association of Kentucky has told some of their members that they cannot offer any help, nor can they support the efforts of these members, in their attempt to remove a local Baptist minister from office, even after he has made racial slurs not once, not twice, but at least three times this year, including using the N-word, while preaching in Sunday school class, and while preaching from the pulpit.”

In the letter it states that Grainger qualified his use of racially insensitive language by saying, “Well, they call us worse names.”

The aggrieved parties say in the letter they have sought help and counseling from the Southern Baptist Association on how to proceed with the removal of Grainger.

According to the letter sent by Slone, Newman, Johnson and Hall, the members have asked Grainger to step down and he has refused.

“In a day and time when we finally have an African American as the United States president, and an African American as president of the Southern Baptist Association, these types of remarks should not be tolerated,” the letter states. “This has greatly upset several members of Jack’s Creek Baptist Church, some of whom have African American family members and biracial grandchildren, and feel as though these remarks were made to discourage their participation at Jack’s Creek Baptist Church.”

When Times staff spoke to Grainger about the claims made in the letter, he said he was unsure if he had made racially sensitive remarks. “I don’t know. I have no idea.”

Grainger did say that no one in his church had come to him about stepping down.

“I haven’t been requested to meet with anyone and I would never refuse to meet with any of my members,” Grainger said. “Anything of that nature would be handled by the church itself. To my knowledge there hasn’t been any.”

Grainger balked at the idea that any perceived racially insensitive language was used in an effort to drive out members of mixed races or people of color. “I would never target someone in that manner.”

Grainger said the people who signed the letter have not been to church in “some time.”

In a response from the Rev. Fred Luter, the president of the Southern Baptist Association, and the first African American to hold that position, he says that he is “amazed” by what is happening at Jack’s Creek Baptist church.

“I am blown away by the fact that a pastor continues to use derogatory language (including using the N-word) even after being confronted by members of his church,” Luter saod.

Luter adds, though, that Jack’s Creek Baptist Church needs to make any changes itself. “The licensing, ordination, hiring, and firing of ministers is a local church matter,” Luter said. “Because every church in the Southern Baptist Convention is an autonomous church, the SBC neither frocks nor defrocks ministers/pastors. That is and has always been the responsibility of the members of that local church.

“I would therefore suggest that a special-called meeting of the Jack’s Creek congregation be called to deal with this very unfortunate matter. I would also suggest that you call the DOM or someone from the local baptist association who is not a member of the church to chair the meeting.”

Luter is pastor of the Franklin Avenue Baptist Church in New Orleans, La., and was elected SBC president this year.

Grainger echoed Luter’s remarks, saying that if someone in the church has issues, they should first “follow the scripture” by meeting with the person individually, or bring someone with them, and then lastly take it to the church. “That’s according to our Constitution and our by-laws.”



Comments
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TrishaH1967
|
November 26, 2012
I'm curious to know if the pastor would use the 'N' word and other racial slurs if God was standing before him ? I seriously doubt it.

I'm also wondering if the pastor remembers the man that carried Jesus' cross when it became unbearable for him ? That man was Simon of Cyrenia, on the northern coast of AFRICA.

KJV Bible

Matt. 27:32

Mark 15:21

www.nationstates.net/nation=dpr_cyrenia

And also

www.encyclopedia.britannia.com

Luke 23:26
bhat
|
November 24, 2012
I wonder what deity Mr. Grainger pretends to worship? Certainly not the Jesus I read about in the Bible. I had the good fortune to visit the Holy Land once, and, though it may surprise some good Christian readers, the people there are not white. No, they have wiry hair and dark, swarthy skin! I have lived long enough to know that people are the same all over and they were just as venal in Jesus' day as they are now, and if Jesus had been fair haired with a light skin, like that picture which hung in my family's parlor as I grew up, he would have been stoned to death long before he ever got around to performing any miracles. He would have resembled Yassar Arafat, but certainly not Peyton Manning. I think Grainger worships some type of hateful god, but it's certainly not Jesus. I don't think Grainger, or any other bigot, will ever pass through those pearly gates. Evil people who hide behind the Gospel to spew their disgusting racial rhetoric are one of the reasons so-called religious organizations should be taxed at the corporate rate, like any other profit making business. It would behoove Grainger, and others, to ponder St. Matthew 22:37-40. By the by, did yo'uns notice President Obama won by a landslide? Seriously! Turn off DWTS and read a newspaper, you'll see.

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