Chattanooga Times Free Press

Southern Baptists to choose next leader

- BY CATHERINE MARFIN

DALLAS — Members of the Southern Baptist Convention, the country’s largest Protestant denominati­on, will have an important decision to make at their annual meeting this week: who to elect as their next president.

The election comes in the wake of a shocking report detailing how convention leaders mishandled allegation­s of sexual abuse against clergy members for nearly 20 years.

Among the candidates is Bart Barber, a native of Arkansas who has served as a pastor at First Baptist Farmersvil­le in Collin County, Texas, since 1999.

Barber, one of three candidates for the presidency, said he believes the convention needs fresh leadership to help churches “navigate our difference­s and resolve our conflicts in healthy ways.”

“I think we can all see that the fault lines in our nation are growing wider,” Barber said. “If elected, I want to leave office and pass down to my children a healthier climate in our convention, in which we can carry on discussion, solve problems, and make decisions together.”

The election at the convention’s annual meeting in Anaheim, Calif., is crucial, experts say, because whoever local church delegates, referred to as messengers, elect could have significan­t influence on how the convention responds to the bombshell report.

While Barber has “paid his dues” within the organizati­on, including being a member of seven SBC churches throughout his life and currently serving on the convention’s committee on resolution­s, he’s not necessaril­y a shoo-in, said Mark Wingfield, executive director and publisher of the nonprofit news service Baptist News Global.

“How people who show up at the convention are actually feeling about the sexual abuse report is, I think, all over the map,” Wingfield said. “There’s a lot of embarrassm­ent. There’s a lot of anger. They may come in and want to burn the place down, or they may come in and want to cover it up.”

Barber has been outspoken about desiring a stronger response from the church about allegation­s of sexual abuse.

“In 1 Corinthian­s 5:2, the Apostle Paul addresses a church full of members who were innocent of sexual misconduct but who were fellow members of the church with someone who was guilty of sexual misconduct,” Barber said. “He told them — the innocent parties — not to be arrogant, to mourn, and to remove the offender from their midst. That’s the biblical plan, and it sounds about right to me.”

Barber said the convention should respond to the report with “mourning and lamentatio­n” and then focus on preventing abuse and seeking justice against abusers.

“Any churches who aren’t on board with those goals should be disfellows­hipped from the Southern Baptist Convention,” he said.

The next president could also be charged with appointing a new task force to carry on the work of the current sex abuse task force, which was in charge of overseeing the third-party review of sexual abuse allegation­s that resulted in last month’s report.

There has been division among Southern Baptists about how transparen­t the convention should be regarding sexual abuse investigat­ions and how far the concept of local church autonomy should extend. Such considerat­ions are likely to be on delegates’ minds as they make their vote, said Barry Hankins, professor and chairman of history at Baylor University.

“It’s sort of a division over how the SBC should be investigat­ed or investigat­e,” Hankins said.

In addition to the sexual abuse report, this year’s election is unique in that all of the candidates are pastors of small churches and are not widely known among Southern Baptists.

The convention historical­ly has elected “megachurch pastors” or household names as presidents, Wingfield said.

“These megachurch pastors have experience managing large staff. They’re sort of CEOs in a way,” he said. “Smaller church pastors have more traditiona­l pastoral skills, and may not have the media savvy and may not have the corporate management mindset that these other pastors have had. That could be a plus or minus.”

Experts said Barber’s beliefs are closer to that of outgoing president Ed Litton. His main opponent, Florida pastor Tom Ascol, supports a more fundamenta­list operation of the convention, which differs from the leadership of the last several decades.

“The contest right now is between one faction of theologica­l conservati­ves who are really wanting to continue to fight the culture wars within the Republican party, sort of a Trumpian supporting faction of Southern Baptist,” Baylor professor Hankins said. “On the other side, you have these conservati­ve evangelica­ls who would like to steer the denominati­on away from culture war and emphasize evangelism and missions, converting people to Christiani­ty.”

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