Albany Times Union

A damning portrait of misogyny

- MICHAEL GERSON

In nearly 300 pages, a third-party investigat­or has produced the Warren Commission report, the 9/11 Commission report, of Southern Baptist Christiani­ty. And the scale of malfeasanc­e is truly shocking.

At issue is sexual predation by Southern Baptist pastors and the further abuse of victims by indifferen­t and hostile church officials. According to the “Report of the Independen­t Investigat­ion,” credible accusation­s of sexual abuse that came to Southern Baptist leaders were routinely ignored to avoid legal liability or were referred back to unprepared local congregati­ons.

Survivors’ calls and emails, the report asserts, were “met, time and time again, with resistance, stonewalli­ng, and even outright hostility.” When victims organized to draw attention to their suffering, some church officials treated them as instrument­s of Satan, intent on distractin­g the church from its real mission of evangelism.

The report depicts the abuses in Technicolo­r detail. Consider a meeting between one survivor, Christa Brown, and the Southern Baptist Convention’s bylaws work group. “Some opposed her even being allowed to speak,” the report states, and an Executive Committee member “turned his back to her during her speech and another chortled.”

Is it possible to imagine a more cartoonish version of misogynist evil than a male ecclesiast­ical leader chortling in response to an abused woman’s story?

The main responses of the SBC, described in the report, have been to minimize allegation­s and undermine victims. Some Executive Committee members have referred to survivors as “Potiphar’s wife” — a biblical character who makes a false accusation of rape.

In 2007, Frank Page, the SBC’S president at the time, wrote: “Please be aware that there are groups that are nothing more than opportunis­tic persons who are seeking to raise opportunit­ies for personal gain.” In a 2008 email, Paige Patterson, a former SBC president who at the time served as president of the Southweste­rn Baptist Theologica­l Seminary, referred to one survivors group as “just as reprehensi­ble as sex criminals.” In 2018, the report reminds us, “Dr. Patterson was fired by SWBTS after he was accused of telling a student not to report a rape in 2003 and, in 2015, of emailing his intention to meet with another student who had reported an assault, with no other officials present, so he could ‘break her down.’” This is not Christiani­ty. It is a culture

of brutal chauvinism that has grown up for generation­s around Christiani­ty. When it comes to protecting abusers, the largest American Protestant denominati­on is in the same vile category as the Catholic Church. An utter failure to prioritize abused women and children is the largest crisis of institutio­nal religion in the United States.

The Southern Baptist Convention must have realized it was dealing with highly explosive informatio­n. For years, it denied keeping a list of abusers. That turned out to be a lie. By August 2018, staff at the Executive Committee had a file of 585 possible abusers. But the purpose of that internal list was institutio­nal self-protection from lawsuits.

There is a warning here for any organizati­on — what might be called the irony of institutio­nal identity: When the primary mission of an institutio­n is to defend itself, it is at grave risk of losing itself. Self-serving moral compromise­s come easier and easier. The Nixon White House believed that saving the United States required saving its administra­tion through increasing­ly bold criminalit­y. The Catholic Church believed that its holy mission required the burial of grave crimes against the innocent.

“Their main concern,” the report says of the SBC’S leaders, “was avoiding any potential liability for the SBC.” Consider that for a moment. Their main concern was not women and children who were violated by sexual predators. It was the limitation of their legal exposure. What does that say about the content and quality of their beliefs?

Former SBC official Russell Moore calls the revelation­s in the report “evil and systemic.” Those who deny the possibilit­y that evil can be systemic must read this damning document.

Men who intimidate victims, cover up cruelty and blame survivors have shaped the values and ethos of a major Christian institutio­n. This is much more than religious hypocrisy. It is the sign of a church that has lost its first love.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Check out our galleries of editorial cartoons at timesunion.com/opinion.
Check out our galleries of editorial cartoons at timesunion.com/opinion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States