Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Southern Baptists push for answers on sex abuse

- HOLLY MEYER

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A top Southern Baptist Convention committee is facing mounting pressure from within the denominati­on to move forward immediatel­y on an investigat­ion into how it handled sexual abuse allegation­s.

Many seminary presidents, state convention leaders and pastors in the nation’s largest Protestant denominati­on are frustrated with the Executive Committee’s inaction.

The critics, growing in number, have called for the committee to accept the terms of the investigat­ion set by thousands of Southern Baptist delegates in June. Some have warned a failure to do so risks financial contributi­ons from churches, erodes trust within the convention and runs counter to the evangelica­l denominati­on’s bottom-up structure.

The Executive Committee, which acts on behalf of the convention when it is not holding a national meeting, is facing a crisis of confidence, said the Rev. Adam Greenway, president of Southweste­rn Baptist Theologica­l Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas. The Executive Committee is at this point because of a “colossal failure of leadership,” he said.

“We’re seeing play out before a watching world something that should never have been allowed to escalate to this point,” Greenway said.

The Executive Committee is facing a third-party investigat­ion into allegation­s it mishandled sexual abuse cases, resisted reforms and intimidate­d survivors, but it is divided on the terms of the review, including a request to waive its attorney-client privilege that protects some communicat­ions with its lawyers. The waiver is viewed as a key demand of the delegates, known as messengers, who put the investigat­ion in motion.

This is the latest tension point in the Southern Baptist Convention’s reckoning with its abuse scandal. A 2019 report from the Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News showed the scope of the issue by documentin­g hundreds of cases in Southern Baptist churches, including several in which alleged perpetrato­rs remained in ministry.

The recent wave of pushback includes a letter signed by 25 Southern Baptist pastors in South Carolina. They called on the Executive Committee to submit to a thorough, independen­t assessment and said they plan to consider directing their churches’ financial support of the committee elsewhere if it does not comply.

“This work necessitat­es waiving attorney-client privilege — as the messengers directed — in order to unequivoca­lly support a transparen­t investigat­ion, engender trust from the churches and messengers, and, most importantl­y, show Christ-like love to victims of sexual abuse,” says the letter, posted Thursday on Twitter.

A statement attributed to an Executive Committee spokesman said investigat­ors will be given “appropriat­e access” to documents and the committee thinks the delegates’ intentions can be achieved without exposing the Southern Baptist Convention to unnecessar­y damage.

“We are concerned that too many of the statements issued reflect disinforma­tion, halftruths, and mischaract­erizations of the motives and actions of the Executive Committee,” the statement said. “There is no attempt to defy the messengers or hide informatio­n from investigat­ors.”

At the national convention gathering in June, thousands of delegates sent the message that they did not want the Executive Committee to oversee an investigat­ion of its own actions. Instead, delegates voted overwhelmi­ngly to create a task force tasked with providing oversight of a third-party review, which will be conducted by investigat­ive firm Guidepost Solutions. The delegates also want the firm’s findings given to the task force and made public ahead of next year’s annual meeting.

The divided Executive Committee has held two meetings with hours of discussion on the investigat­ion. Although it approved allocating $1.6 million for the assessment, the committee has twice delayed finalizing an agreement for the investigat­ion in favor of further negotiatio­ns between its officers and task force representa­tives. Pushback among many Southern Baptists has grown with each deferral.

The task force has urged the Executive Committee to waive attorney-client privilege for the investigat­ion. But attempts to do so have failed to get enough votes during the top panel’s two recent meetings. Some Executive Committee members are wary of taking that step, saying it could jeopardize their insurance policies, while others are concerned about the consequenc­es of not doing what the delegates have asked.

The Rev. R. Albert Mohler Jr., president of the Southern Baptist Theologica­l Seminary, issued a statement Wednesday saying the question facing the Executive Committee is not whether to comply with the delegates’ mandate, but how.

The board of trustees and officers of the Baptist State Convention of Michigan also spoke out. They passed a resolution this week calling on the Executive Committee to abide by the delegates’ terms, including waiving attorney-client privilege.

The Executive Committee is expected to meet again next week.

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