The SBC was divided over theology, particularly the issue of biblical inerrancy.
From the economist.com
The doctrine of biblical inerrancy seems inherently improbable, for two reasons.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Conservatives campaigned in 15 states to draw the inerrancy voters to Houston.
From the time.com
As a way of salvaging any notion of the inerrancy of scripture it falls short.
From the scienceblogs.com
You can avoid this problem by taking Carter's approach and dispensing with inerrancy.
From the scienceblogs.com
We also know that there are creationists who are not believers in biblical inerrancy.
From the en.wikipedia.org
She was kicked out of one church, she says, for insisting on the inerrancy of Scripture.
From the newsweek.com
Evangelical thinkers take an enlightened view of scriptural inerrancy.
From the time.com
It does not claim for itself inerrancy, which is the invention of these Bible believers.
From the time.com
More examples
(Christianity) exemption from error; "biblical inerrancy"
(inerrant) inerrable: not liable to error; "the Church was...theoretically inerrant and omnicompetent"-G.G.Coulton; "lack an inerrant literary sense"; "an unerring marksman"
In philosophy and the study of religions, inerrancy is used to refer to any doctrine held as being true without possibility of error.
(inerrant) Of or pertaining to inerrancy. Without error, particularly used in reference to the Bible
(Inerrant) When applied to a sacred text like the Bible, inerrancy is the belief that, as originally written, its contents are infallible, totally free of error and totally authoritative. Many religions, particularly their conservative wings, believe in the inerrancy of their sacred texts.
Relates to the absolute correctness of the Bible in factual assertions (including historical and scientific assertions).
"The Bible alone, and the Bible in its entirety, is the Word of God written and is therefore inerrant in the autographs..." is the belief required to join the Evangelical Philosophical Society (and the Evangelical Theological Society). ...
The quality of freedom from error which is possessed by the Bible.
The attribute of the books of Scripture whereby they faithfully and without error teach that truth which God, for the sake of our salvation, wished to have confided through the Sacred Scriptures.