You said that very nicely, Lisa, and you do have a point.
But, most Protestant denominations - especially Baptists - say that they base their doctrine on the Bible, not on Creeds or Church history. At this point in his work, he has not violated the teaching of the Bible in any way. And, knowing Orthodoxy as I do, I can say I'd be very surprised - indeed shocked - if he taught anything on his show that contradicted the Bible. Orthodoxy does not contradict the Bible.
The article had a lot of *false* description of Orthodoxy that were given as reasons for firing him. I found that disturbing.
If they said, as Baptists our Creeds say A, and as Orthodox, your Creeds say B - and those two things are not compatible, I would have had to agree with their decision. And, if they said, "We don't hire anyone but Baptists," I would have had to agree with their decision (but I don't *think* that's the case). I could be wrong. I don't even think Mr. Hanegraff was a Baptist BEFORE he became Orthodox?
From the tone of the article, it SEEMED like the decision was based upon personal animosity against Orthodoxy - a personal animosity based on false assumptions - rather than on any disagreement. They didn't point out a single thing he had said on his show that they could find fault with!
And, yes, we have a small venue for radio online.
http://www.ancientfaith.com/But, although the Orthodox Church worldwide is the second largest Christian group, here in America it is VERY small (around 2%), so we have extremely limited English Language offerings.
Besides that, we really DO want to get along with others and be part of American Christianity and not build a cultural moat around ourselves.
This seems to me to be one more time that all dialogue is cut off before anyone even talks - more of the "Political correctness" culture.