The Punxsutawney Spirit

Southern Baptists say denominati­on faces DOJ investigat­ion

- By Holly Meyer and David Crary

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention said Friday that several of the denominati­on’s major entities are under investigat­ion by the U.S. Department of Justice in the wake of its multiple problems related to clergy sex abuse.

The SBC’s Executive Committee has received a subpoena, but no individual­s have been subpoenaed at this point, according to the committee’s lawyers.

“This is an ongoing investigat­ion and we are not commenting on our discussion­s with DOJ,” they said.

The statement from SBC leaders — including Executive Committee members, seminary presidents and heads of mission organizati­ons — gave few details about the investigat­ion, but indicated it dealt with widespread sexual abuse problems that have rocked the largest Protestant denominati­on in the U.S.

“Individual­ly and collective­ly each SBC entity is resolved to fully and completely cooperate with the investigat­ion,” the statement said. “While we continue to grieve and lament past mistakes related to sexual abuse, current leaders across the SBC have demonstrat­ed a firm conviction to address those issues of the past and are implementi­ng measures to ensure they are never repeated in the future.”

There was no immediate comment from the Justice Department about the investigat­ion.

Earlier this year, an SBC sex abuse task force released a blistering 288page report from outside consultant Guidepost Solutions. The firm’s sevenmonth independen­t investigat­ion found disturbing details about how denominati­onal leaders mishandled sex abuse claims and mistreated victims.

The report focused specifical­ly on how the SBC’s Executive Committee responded to abuse cases, revealing that it had secretly maintained a list of clergy and other church workers accused of abuse. The committee later apologized and released the list, which had hundreds of accused workers on it.

A Guidepost spokespers­on declined to comment on news of the DOJ probe.

Following the release of the Guidepost report, the SBC voted during its annual meeting in June to created a way to track pastors and other church workers credibly accused of sex abuse and launch a new task force to oversee further reforms. Earlier this week, SBC President Bart Barber, who also signed Friday’s statement, announced the names of the Southern Baptist pastors and church members who will serve on the task force.

Southern Baptist sex abuse survivor Christa Brown, who has long called for the SBC to do more to address sex abuse across its churches, celebrated the news of the DOJ investigat­ion.

“Hallelujah. It’s about time,” Brown said in a Friday post on Twitter. “This is what’s needed.”

Another survivor, Jules Woodson, went public with her abuse story in 2018 and has been pushing for reforms in the SBC ever since. On Friday, she reacted to the investigat­ion news by tweeting, “May justice roll down!!!”

Oklahoma pastor Mike Keahbone, who serves on the Executive Committee and is the vice chair of the new abuse task force, said on Twitter that the investigat­ion “is not something to fear ... If there is more work to do, we will do it.”

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