Bob Jones Apologizes for 'Reckless' Statement Calling for Gays to Be Stoned to Death in 1980
Jones, who was attending a White House meeting at the time with other fundamentalist pastors to pressure then President Carter to not extend Civil Rights Act provisions to gay Americans, said:
"I'm sure this will be greatly misquoted,
but it would not be a bad idea to bring the swift justice today that
was brought in Israel's day against murder and rape and homosexuality. I
guarantee it would solve the problem post-haste if homosexuals were
stoned, if murderers were immediately killed as the Bible commands."
This past week, BJUnity, a support group for LGBT BJU students, delivered a change.org petition to the university calling on Jones to apologize.Jones, who now serves as the University's cancellor, issued the following statement in response to the petition:
“I take personal ownership of this
inflammatory rhetoric. This reckless statement was made in the heat of a
political controversy 35 years ago. It is antithetical to my theology
and my 50 years of preaching a redeeming Christ, who came into the world
not to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be
saved.
"Upon now reading these long-forgotten
words, they seem to me as words belonging to a total stranger -- were my
name not attached.
"I cannot erase them, but wish I could,
because they do not represent the belief of my heart or the content of
my preaching. Neither before, nor since, that event in 1980 have I ever
advocated the stoning of sinners.
"The Bible I love, preach and try to
practice does not present today the stoning of sinners as God’s way. Its
message is the good news that Christ Jesus was condemned on behalf of
sinners to rescue all of us from condemnation and judgment by His
willing sacrifice, for he was made sin for us that we might be made the
righteousness of God in him.
"I apologize for the reflection those
remarks bring upon Jesus Christ, whom I love; Bob Jones University,
which I have loved and served; and my own personal testimony
Reporting on Jones stepping down as BJU president in 2005, The Washington Post noted:
Bob III -- known on campus as "Dr. Bob"
-- became president in 1971, the year BJU admitted its first black
student. But he maintained a ban on interracial dating, writing, "This
institution's Bible-based convictions are against interracial dating and
marriage." That position cost BJU its tax-exempt status in 1983 and
kicked up a political firestorm in 2000 when presidential candidate
George W. Bush spoke at the school.

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