Orginally published on Monday, November 06, 2006 at 4:16 PM
by Todd Rhoades
The National Association of Evangelicals confirmed the selection of the Rev. Leith Anderson, senior pastor of a Minnesota megachurch, as its interim president on Saturday, temporarily filling the leadership position that was left vacant by the sudden resignation of its former president, the Rev. Ted Haggard.
“Dr. Anderson knows the evangelical world and is uniquely positioned to serve the National Association of Evangelicals at this time,” said L. Roy Taylor, NAE Chairman of the Board. “He’s a man of great personal integrity and spiritual leadership who can step into the president’s role without missing a beat.”
A 15-member Executive Committee made the selection at an emergency conference on Friday, during the same time they accepted Haggard’s resignation. The following day, Anderson agreed to serve for an indefinite period in order to give the Association time to find a permanent president.
Anderson is the senior Pastor of the 5,000-member Wooddale Church in Eden Prairie, Minn., and has served as the NAE interim president in the time immediately preceding Haggard’s appointment in 2003. According to Richard Cizik, Vice President of Governmental Affairs for the NAE, Anderson’s experience, coupled with his steady composure, makes him the perfect candidate for the difficult position.
“I have complete confidence in Leith,” said Cizik, who has been with the NAE for 25 years. “He was a unanimous choice by the Executive Committee. He brings both the authority as a pastor, an author, missions leader, and seminary lecturer to the organization, and a calming presence like baking soda on a frying pan.”
Anderson fills the NAE presidency at time of tragedy and scrutiny for the 60-year-old organization. Early last week, Mike Jones, a male prostitute from Denver, revealed to the media that he allegedly had a three-year sexual relationship with Haggard, a married father of five. Although Haggard only admitted to receiving a massage from Jones, he confessed to being “guilty of sexual immorality” and opening “the door for additional allegations.”
In an interview with CNN, Jones said he exposed the relationship because he “owed it to the gay community to expose the hypocrisy” and to influence this week’s vote on an amendment banning gay marriage in Colorado.
“I’ve been listening to Mr. Haggard and his church actively campaign against gay marriage amendment to the constitution in Colorado, and I thought this was not right,” said Jones. “Here is a man who is married, and he is fooling around behind his wife’s back.”
Cizik, however, said he believes voters in Colorado and elsewhere will not be swayed by the controversy. Instead, he said, “evangelicals may come out stronger from this experience,” with a chance to share the gospel to people they had not had a chance to speak with before.
Cizik also expressed deep gratitude to those supporting and praying for the NAE, adding that the organization has been “receiving non-stop calls of support.”
Anderson has served at Wooddale Church for 29 years, and is the author of eight books. He was educated at the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago and received a B.A. in sociology from Bradley University in Peoria, Ill., a Master of Divinity from the Denver Seminary in Denver, Colo., and a Doctor of Ministry from Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, Calif.
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There are 7 Comments:
Uhhh, I have a question, what exactly does the NAE do? Why do we need them? I am serious. How can a person who is already over scheduled like Dr. Anderson (awesome name by the way) head up an organization like this? Do they speak me? I don’t think so. Inquiring minds all that.
The NAE should have made a big deal about this, like getting the next Pope. They should have put smoke from the chimney-- black for a few days with no choice, then white when they have a choice a few days later. Yes- there’s lots we can learn from the Catholics.
...Bernie
Yes yes yes! And there could be a funky hat for the head of the NAE. Taller than the pope’s!
And yeah… what does the NAE do? According to NAE.org, “The mission of the National Association of Evangelicals is to extend the kingdom of God through a fellowship of member denominations, churches, organizations, and individuals, demonstrating the unity of the body of Christ by standing for biblical truth, speaking with a representative voice, and serving the evangelical community through united action, cooperative ministry, and strategic planning. “
Pretty vague if you ask me…
There wasn’t someone from a “small church” that was qualified?
I’m not sure, because it’s kind of a small picture, but I don’t think that’s Leith Anderson at the top of this article. It looks like Lynn Anderson. Might want to check on that.
RCG
I think that is Rick Warren’s picture with a new hair cut.
Well I guess the NAE is the “good ol’ boys club” for evangelicals who are not fundamentalists. I put it in the same category of Rotary Club and Kiwanis. They don’t effect me until something dumb happens which the media picks up and clubs the rest of evangelical Christianity with. Personally, if NAE went away, my life would not change ...
And yes, why is it the big church pastors the ones who are selected? I’ll tell you quite simply, we are too busy doing God’s work and caring for our flocks. Our time is too valuable to waste on such an activity. Let the big guys do it cause they have plenty of folks to run the mega-churches as needed [and this is not a complaint...they do have more folks who should be involved in ministry].
Also we know in America that bigger is better...right? Well...then there are all those verses in the Bible speaking of seeds, remnants, and faithfulness.
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