Surrey, B.C., church switches affiliation to be more inclusive - Action News
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British Columbia

Surrey, B.C., church switches affiliation to be more inclusive

A Surrey, B.C., Baptist church has switched its affiliation to a more inclusive one, more than a decade after a gay couple who were members forced a reckoning over how they were being treated.

Members of the Baptist Church at Southpoint come to terms with 2 of its members being gay

Two men holding a baby.
David Carlson (left) and Colin Evans with their daughter Becca, who was dedicated at the Church at Southpoint after they adopted her. (Submitted by Katie Adams)

A Surrey, B.C., Baptist church has switched its affiliation to a more inclusive religious group, more than a decade after a gay couple who were members forced a reckoning over how they were being treated.

Colin Evans was on the board of the Church at Southpointaround 2008when it became a member of the Canadian Baptists of Western Canada (CBWC).

Around that time, he said, he came out as gay andmarriedDavid Carlson, with whom he now has a child.

For years, he says the two sat at the back of the church and felt excluded from the congregation at large. When thepastor at the time left, Evans and Carlson say there was pressure on the church to take a more firm stand and exclude the couple entirely.

A woman with blond hair smiles in front of a cross in a church.
Anne Baxter Smith, the pastor at the Church at Southpoint, said her congregation has learned to become more inclusive of diverse sexualities over the past decade thanks to married church members Colin Evans and David Carlson. (CBC)

Evans says the church's next pastor, Anne Baxter Smith, accepted them as members of the congregation, but they still didn't feelcomfortable with the church's affiliation, given the CBWC's views against gay marriage.

Now, after a decade of coming to termswith how the church treats 2SLGBTQ+ people, Southpoint's members havedecided to move the church to the Canadian Association forBaptistFreedoms.

"I just have nothing but pride for the church and where it's come to," Evans said.

"The people have changed. So many people have come up and said, 'Thank you so much forsticking with us, because not only have you changed the church, but you've changed me, or you've changed my heart, or you've changed how I view, you know, LGBT people.'"

Several rows of men, women and children pose for a photo at a church.
Members of the the Church at Southpoint pictured in 2023. (Submitted by Anne Baxter Smith)

Evans and Carlson's child, Becca, hadbeen dedicated at Southpoint, and Carlson said it felt good to see the church take a stand and accept his family.

"It was a strange and beautiful thing to see a church stepping into its role as a protector of queer people instead of a persecutor of queer people," he said.

Change came after meeting with pastor

Evans acknowledged that, for many years, it was a very uncomfortable existence for him and his husband when they went to church, and he heard many whispers while they sat in the pews.

"Our choice was to [either] leave and just wash your hands of it, or a choice was to just be in silence in the back row every Sunday and force the conversations to happen," he said. "And that's what we did."

When Baxter Smith became pastor, she said she decided to have a frank conversation with the couple about how they fit into the church a conversation that eventually left them all in tears.

A man smiles while seated on an outdoor patio.
Colin Evans said the time spent sitting at the back of the church with his husband was painful, not knowing whether they would ever be accepted. (CBC)

"I really am grateful for Colin and David. I feel like they changed my ministry. They changed my life. They changed my understanding of God," she said.

"Kudos to them. They stayed put. They stayed at the table and forced us into the discomfort of talking about this and finding a way."

After the meeting, Baxter Smith says she began to use resources from the U.S. National Gay and Lesbian Task Forcein order to be more inclusive toward2SLGBTQ+ people.

Church changed its affiliation this year

However, the pastor says that some Alberta-based churches in theCBWCtook objection to Southpoint'sinclusion of 2SLGBTQ+ people and asked the CBWCto issue disciplinary letters.

In 2022, after deliberations in its general assembly, the CBWC issued an identity statementthat defined marriage as only being between a man and a woman.

The next year, it laid out a disciplinary process against churches that weren't in compliance with the identity statement which is when Southpoint decided to leave.

A sign reading 'The Church at Southpoint all welcome... truly, everyone.'
The Church at Southpoint is located on 24th Avenue in South Surrey, B.C. It is now a member of the Canadian Association of Baptists for Freedoms. (CBC)

The church became a member of theCanadian Association for BaptistFreedoms this yearafter its congregation voted to change its original affiliation.

The association states on the homepage of its website that it aims to be "a safe and welcoming environment in which Baptists can share all concerns and points of view without fear of being marginalised."

After the change in affiliation, Baxter Smith said she "felt like this big weight had fallen offme, and we could finally now be who we were without any threat."

CBCNews has contacted the CBWCfor comment but has yet to receive a reply.

Evans and Carlson, who have since moved to Victoria, said they were both thankful to their former church.

"Change doesn't have to happen loudly. It can happen just by sitting and just by being present," Evans said.

With files from Radio-Canada's William Burr