A pastor friend called recently with a question I could not shake. His church has served their local public school for years. Now a congregation from a mainline denomination wants to join the work. Are they sound? Should he partner with them? They will be there either way.

Title card reading When Does Cooperation Become Compromise? set over an empty auditorium of blue seats facing a bare platform. A Baptist Press First Person by Josh Taylor.
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Every pastor I know is living some version of that conversation. The invitation rarely arrives looking like heresy. It comes as a service project, a school function, a civic prayer breakfast, a coalition for a worthy cause. The question underneath is always the same. When does standing beside someone stop being cooperation and start becoming endorsement?

I worked through it the way I work through most things, with Scripture and a little church history. Albert Mohler’s theological triage. The Apostle John’s warning in 2 John. The day, by Irenaeus’s account, that John fled a bathhouse rather than share a roof with a heretic. The piece is my attempt to give pastors a way to think clearly before they say yes to the next partnership.

Baptist Press ran it this month as a First Person. I would be grateful if you read it, and more grateful if you passed it to a pastor wrestling with the question right now.

Read it at Baptist Press

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