Houston Chronicle Sunday

Building a bigger tent

Southern Baptists reaching out to other faiths.

- By Heidi Hall

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Southern Baptist Convention was so famously insular for so long that it earned its own joke about members believing they’re the only ones in heaven.

The nation’s largest Protestant denominati­on was known more for what, and often who, it rejected than what it included — with political warriors in the SBC leadership often alienating other religious groups and particular­ly the racial minorities in them.

But over the past decade that began to change:

Southern Baptists elected the denominati­on’s first AfricanAme­rican president, apologized for supporting slavery, apologized to Asians for the culturally offensive “Rickshaw Rally” vacation Bible school curriculum, reprimande­d their former Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission chief Richard Land for racially charged remarks, and recognized that its regional-sounding brand has so much baggage that perhaps a name change was in order.

They began reaching out to other evangelica­l churches and to Roman Catholics on issues of common interest, a collaborat­ive spirit that landed three Southern Baptists in top leadership roles at nondenomin­ational evangelica­l universiti­es.

Then last week at its annual convention the denominati­on seemed to confirm its shift toward both ecumenical work and racial reconcilia­tion by taking the first step to joining the National Associatio­n of Evangelica­ls and, most notably, by repudiatin­g the Confederat­e battle flag.

Taken together, these moves represent a significan­t pivot away from the conservati­ve takeover that began in the 1970s and produced a string of hard-line leaders, said David Gushee, director of the Center for Theology and Public Life at Mercer University and a columnist for Religion News Service.

Those leaders included the denominati­on’s president in 1980, Bailey Smith, who declared that God didn’t hear the prayers of Jews.

Gushee and others track the current shift back to the 2006 election of then-unknown Frank Page to the denominati­on’s presidency. Page represents a generation of Southern Baptist leadership less concerned with political victories and more impressed by leaders who are pastoral, plugged into the broader culture and manifestin­g biblical fruits of the spirit, Gushee said.

“I would say that leadership in the denominati­on seems to be passing to people who are still plenty conservati­ve, but they are not mean on the whole,” he said. “They are cooperatin­g with Catholics when they can and other evangelica­ls. They’re sensitive to the convention’s history on race and trying to get that right. And the Confederat­e flag discussion … was the next step forward there.”

Without the shift, Ed Stetzer said he may not have spent much of the last decade as director of the SBC-affiliated LifeWay Research or have been considered for the Wheaton College chair he’ll take starting July 1.

“The Southern Baptists were continuing to move to the right and erecting new arguments over secondary, tertiary issues,” Stetzer said in an interview leading up to the June 14-15 annual meeting.

“In 2006, they decided they were conservati­ve enough. They said, ‘This is where we want to be’ — to the disappoint­ment of a significan­t number of people who wanted to keep narrowing the parameters of cooperatio­n.”

Stetzer, employed as a North American Mission Board missiologi­st at the time, said he was considerin­g jobs outside the denominati­on. Page convinced him to stay and work together.

“In 2007, Frank asked me to preach at the convention. I told the crowd, ‘This is the only place I go where I feel young and thin,’” Stetzer said.

When he starts his job at the Billy Graham Center for Evangelism at Wheaton — the flagship evangelica­l Christian college — Stetzer will be another Southern Baptist in a top role at a nondenomin­ational institutio­n.

The King’s College and Trinity Internatio­nal University both hired Southern Baptists to their presidenci­es in the last three years — increasing evidence of a decreasing­ly insular convention.

Page, then pastor of First Baptist Church in Taylors, S.C., said he didn’t seek the presidency and said he was so convinced he would not win that he barely had a platform to discuss as a convention worker guided him toward a post-election press conference. He handily beat two other candidates on the first ballot and went on to serve two terms.

“I assured people I was not trying to undo a conservati­ve resurgence,” Page said. “People feared that. It took three decades to turn us back to a conservati­ve direction. I said, ‘I’m an inerrantis­t, but not an angry one.’”

Developmen­ts since then have been ones he hoped for.

“Discontinu­ing the use of the Confederat­e battle flag — I could not take credit for that, but I hope that in some small way, I encouraged us toward this. We still have a lot to do,” said Page, who became CEO of the SBC Executive Committee two years after his two-term denominati­onal presidency ended and still holds that seat.

Local churches can feel the effects of the denominati­onal leadership shift, noted Mike Glenn, pastor of 10,000-member Brentwood Baptist Church in Tennessee. Glenn, a longtime friend of Page’s, said it’s likely the SBC executive’s ability to find one or two points he can agree upon with someone and then build from there has contribute­d.

“Several years ago, when we were so actively politicall­y engaged, there were times when statements would be made by Southern Baptist leaders, and we would have to say, ‘They don’t represent us,’” Glenn said. “I think there was a sobering up about the realities of the political process. The Southern Baptist Convention had put a lot of eggs in the conservati­ve Republican political system and got very little in return.”

(Not that Southern Baptists have exactly gone Democratic: the immediate past president of the SBC, Ronnie Floyd, and a longtime SBC leader, Richard Land, are on Donald Trump’s evangelica­l advisory board, and white evangelica­ls are still supporting Trump by a wide margin over Hillary Clinton, who continues to draw sharp criticism from many Southern Baptists.)

As for the denominati­on’s future goals, Glenn would like to see the convention mimic his church, doing more hands-on ministry to communitie­s in need. “We have talked so much and done so little, nobody is listening to us anymore. Provide clinics and services in underserve­d areas. And then you’ll earn the right to speak.”

The denominati­on is continuing its outreach to other faiths. This month, the ERLC joined Catholics in a Capitol Hill briefing on anti-abortion issues, said Jeanne Mancini, the Catholic head of nonsectari­an March for Life. She said her organizati­on, seeing the potential for like-minded collaborat­ion, long had sought ways to pair on public policy.

“We don’t typically get into theologica­l conversati­ons,” she said. “In terms of public policy, we’re working handin-glove, and I’ve never been offended by anything they’ve had to say.”

But while Southern Baptists may have a bigger tent these days, there are fewer inside it.

Still the nation’s largest Protestant denominati­on with 15.3 million members, that total has decreased for nine straight years. Not only are members departing — 200,000 from 201415 — fewer are joining. Baptisms have decreased eight of the last 10 years.

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 ?? Jeff Roberson photos / Associated Press ?? Pastor Ronnie Floyd, past president of the Southern Baptist Convention, addresses members during the organizati­on’s annual meeting last month in St. Louis.
Jeff Roberson photos / Associated Press Pastor Ronnie Floyd, past president of the Southern Baptist Convention, addresses members during the organizati­on’s annual meeting last month in St. Louis.
 ??  ?? People pray during the Southern Baptist Convention in St. Louis. The SBC has 15.3 million members.
People pray during the Southern Baptist Convention in St. Louis. The SBC has 15.3 million members.

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