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Southern Baptists expected to reaffirm ban of women in pastoral roles

By Shelia Poole, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on

Published in Religious News

“Atlanta is a more encompassing city, spiritually,” he said. “A lot of churches here are not as conservative as a lot of the rural SBC churches. That’s why some of them have pulled out of the convention and others are more or less loosely aligned with the convention.”

He said some issues that keep his church and others aligned with the SBC is missionary work, and a belief in the Baptist faith and message. “However, there are some issues pertaining to critical race theory, (which) is one of our biggest fights,” Ward said.

He acknowledges the good work by women in ministry. While he said he cannot scripturally support women as senior pastors, he believes women should be allowed to hold leadership roles and hold associate pastor and elder titles in the church.

“I’m not God and I can’t say who God calls,” said Ward, whose wife is a minister. “I know some great women pastors and see the great work that they do. Black churches use the titles of elder and pastor for leadership positions in the church (but) that doesn’t mean they are the senior pastor of the church.”

Many fear the denomination is shifting further to the right and may lose some members as a result.

“The SBC has unleashed a dynamic in which each annual meeting includes considerable focus on how much further to go in terms of restricting diversity of conviction and practice and expressing hard-line conservative moral and political positions,” David P. Gushee, distinguished university professor of Christian Ethics at Mercer University and author of “Defending Democracy from Its Christian Enemies,” wrote in response to emailed questions from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

The Law Amendment was approved during last year’s SBC annual meeting in New Orleans and needs a second vote of approval to amend the constitution, Gushee said. “It is likely to pass again, but it is opposed by those who think it goes too far — not in the basic concept, but in authorizing the SBC to purge churches that should not be purged.”

The Nashville-based denomination, which was established in 1845 in Augusta, Georgia, has purged churches that ran afoul of that doctrine. Last year, for instance, at the 2023 annual meeting, messengers overwhelmingly upheld the ouster of California’s Saddleback Church and Fern Creek Baptist Church in Louisville, Kentucky over the ordination of women in leading pastoral roles.

Maina Mwaura, a metro Atlanta-based journalist who has covered the denomination for years, believes the SBC is “putting themselves in a box that is completely where the rest of the country is not. What do you do with that when you have so pigeonholed yourself in a country where women do lead? It’s the most bizarre thing ever,” he said. “I don’t know how they are going to reach Generation Z acting like this, but I don’t think they care.”

 

Though it is the largest Protestant denomination in the United States, the SBC is grappling with diminishing numbers and an aging membership. According to the Annual Church Profile compiled by Lifeway Christian Resources, the total membership of Southern Baptist-affiliated congregations is 12.9 million, down 241,000 from 2022. The three previous years saw declines of 2.9% or more. This past year, membership fell 1.8%. States home to the most Southern Baptists include Texas (2.46 million), Georgia (1.14 million), North Carolina (989,872), Tennessee (849,306) and Florida (768,437).

Despite the overall membership decline, the profile survey found that baptisms, worship service attendance and small group participation all grew.

So far, there are 728 messengers, also known as delegates, who have preregistered from 235 churches in Georgia, making the state the fifth highest in terms of sending messengers to the annual meeting.

For years, the denomination has had to deal with a major sex abuse scandal that rocked Southern Baptists and victim’s advocates. The denomination launched a landmark third-party investigation of how abuse allegations were handled and victims treated.

Reforms instituted after that investigation are still hot topics. The report named hundreds of church staffers, volunteers and leaders who had credible allegations against them for abuse.

“On the sex abuse issue, the SBC pastors clearly are divided on their level of support for efforts to implement the recommendations of the Guidepost Solutions report on sex abuse in the Convention,” said Gushee.

Among the heavy hitters attending the meeting is former Vice President Mike Pence. He will discuss topics like his journey into politics and how pastors can partner with elected officials.

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©2024 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Visit at ajc.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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