ATLANTA, Georgia (AP) -- The Georgia Baptist Convention has formally ended its 170-year relationship with Mercer University, a relationship that had grown increasingly troubled over the convention's concerns that Mercer is more liberal than its Southern Baptist roots.
Convention members had voted last year to sever ties with the Macon, Georgia, institution. A second vote Tuesday finalized the split, which means Mercer must seek Baptist funding from individual churches rather than the convention.
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Convention members were disturbed last year by a National Coming Out Day program on campus -- called the Mercer Triangle Symposium -- sponsored by a gay student group and supported by faculty and staff.
"The waters had been troubled for some time over a number of issues, but that seemed to be the straw that broke the camel's back," said Wayne Robertson, chairman of the convention's administration committee and pastor at Morningside Baptist Church in Valdosta, Georgia.
Mercer President William D. Underwood said the college will continue a relationship with its founding denomination.
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more:
http://www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/11/15/baptist.ties.severed.ap/index.htmlAdios, Conventioneers, it's been real.
Mercer has been "the other" large private university in Georgia forever. Maybe they are opening up a bit -- if they have a recognized gay student group on campus already, that's already a big improvement over Southern Baptists in general. More openness and tolerance can only help them as a University.