New SBC President commits to move sex abuse reforms forward
Bart Barber, the newly elected president of the Southern Baptist Convention, is vowing to expedite sex abuse reforms in the nation’s largest Protestant denomination
New SBC President commits to move sex abuse reforms forward
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Your support makes all the difference.The new president of the Southern Baptist Convention said Wednesday he will accelerate sex abuse reforms in the nation’s largest Protestant denomination.
Texas pastor Bart Barber's first priority: to assemble a panel of people -- Southern Baptist leaders and experts -- to shepherd this work for the whole convention as mandated by thousands of representatives from local SBC churches.
The day after his victory in a run-off race against Tom Ascol, a Florida pastor who vowed to take the conservative denomination further right, Barber reiterated his desire to lead by being a unifier and peacebuilder. The SBC has seen deep divisions and a steady drop in membership for more than a decade.
During a news conference Wednesday, Barber voiced his commitment to forming a new action group to help carry out the recommendations of the Sexual Abuse Task Force, which delegates overwhelmingly approved Tuesday. Delegates at the SBC's national meeting also agreed to create a way to track church workers credibly accused of sex abuse.
Those recommendations came after a blistering 288-page report from outside consultant, Guidepost Solutions. The firm's seven-month independent investigation found disturbing details about how denominational leaders mishandled sex abuse claims and mistreated victims.
On the final day of the two-day annual meeting, Barber said sexual predators have used the convention's decentralized polity to turn congregations “into a hunting ground.” But with systemic changes and reforms, Barber hoped sexual predators will be put on notice.
“The hunters are now the hunted,” he said.
While he was reluctant to provide a timeline for action, he promised to appoint the new task force swiftly.
Barber repeatedly called for Southern Baptists to find common ground despite their differences over issues such as race and gender roles.
“I do believe we have seen some unhealthy ways recently that secular politics have dominated the conversation here in the Southern Baptist Convention,” Barber said. “As Christians, we need to be engaged in politics. We just need to make sure that in the dance between theology and politics, theology leads.”
Barber said “the coarseness and crass discourse out there has crept into” the SBC and into people's social media feeds. Expressing anger on Twitter and “trying to own” people instead of solving problems has only deepened divisions among Southern Baptists, he said.
“Every way I’ve served SBC has left scars,” he said. “But this family of churches is worth it.”
However, the SBC, despite its size and political influence, has yet to figure out a way to stem long-term declines in membership or in baptisms – their key metric for religious vitality – that began long before the pandemic disruptions.
Annual baptisms stood at 154,701 in 2021, down 63% from their 1999 peak. Membership stood at 13.7 million, down 16% from its 2006 peak, according to statistics from the SBC’s affiliate, Lifeway Christian Resources.
Barber said tracking membership is complicated and results can be skewed, but noted the SBC president has little influence over it. “It's the local churches that are going to carry the gospel forward and help us grow," he said.
By any measure of the nation's political and religious spectrum, the SBC is staunchly conservative. But groups such as the Conservative Baptist Network and Founders Ministries, which Ascol has long led, have mobilized to pull the SBC further to the right, claiming that its leaders and seminaries are being influenced by liberal trends and “wokeness.”
Candidates aligned with these groups were defeated for SBC president, chair of its Executive Committee and president of the influential Pastors Conference, held each year just before the annual meeting. But at least one of their preferred candidates prevailed in a narrow vote -- Victor Chayasirisobhon, pastor of First Southern Baptist Church of Anaheim, for first vice president.
But throughout the meeting, hardline Southern Baptists voiced a slate of criticisms from the convention hall floor. They derided the hiring of Guidepost for the investigation following a recent pro-Pride tweet, pushed back against allowing Saddleback Church to remain in the convention despite ordaining women pastors and more.
A report by the Credentials Committee, which reviews if churches are in good standing, said it wasn't clear whether the denomination's official opposition to women pastors applied only to lead pastors or also to other ministry roles.
Rod Martin, a co-founder of the Conservative Baptist Network, vowed to continue its efforts in the coming year.
“Well, time to regroup and redouble our efforts,” Martin tweeted “I don’t think people realized we’d reached the point where an ostensibly conservative Credentials Committee can’t define the word ‘pastor’. "
He predicted a different result in next year's annual meeting, in New Orleans, which unlike Anaheim is in the Southern Baptist heartland.
Delegate Scott Dunford, executive director of church planting at Redeemer Church in Fremont, California, said he voted for Barber because he sees him as a strong conservative who is also compassionate toward other groups, and particularly on the issue of sexual abuse in the church.
Coming into the convention, Dunford said the sexual abuse crisis was foremost in his mind.
”(Barber) really seemed compassionate to the concerns of the sexual abuse victims – in a way I didn’t hear from the other candidates,” he said.
But Dunford doesn’t believe appointing women as pastors will help alleviate the problem.
“Every denomination has a sexual abuse problem – even those that have women pastors,” he said. “Anywhere you have a large group of people interacting, you’re going to have wolves trying to manipulate the situation.”
The Rev. Clint Sullens, pastor of Faith Baptist Church in Monroe, Georgia, said he cast his vote for Tom Ascol because “he is scripturally focused, and we really need that in this season.”
“But, I’m not discouraged or disappointed at where we are right now,” he said. “We had great men to choose from.”
Sullens is hopeful that the vast denomination will come together especially to prevent sexual abuse and do a better job of caring for survivors. He believes uniting on critical issues is possible.
The delegates also defeated a proposal to defund the convention’s public-policy arm, which has long been a target of critics complaining it isn’t conservative enough. Supporters said the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission will be needed more than ever given the anticipated battles in state legislatures if the Supreme Court overturns the Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion.
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Smith reported from Pittsburgh.
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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
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