Houston Chronicle Sunday

Other faiths take heed of SBC crisis

Model seen for decentrali­zed denominati­ons

- By Robert Downen STAFF WRITER • To read our investigat­ion, go to houstonchr­onicle.com/AbuseOfFai­th

The headline made David Duncan ill.

He was well aware of the Catholic Church’s abuse scandal and, during his 13year tenure as pastor of Houston’s Memorial Church of Christ, helped guide the church as it adopted safeguards to protect children from sexual predators.

But the reports in the Houston Chronicle were different. They hit particular­ly close to home.

The series, Abuse of Faith, found that hundreds of Southern Baptist church leaders and volunteers have been convicted or credibly accused of sex crimes in the last two decades. They left behind more than 700 victims, most of them children.

The structure of the SBC, a collective of 47,000 autonomous and self-governing churches, enabled predators to move undetected and stifled reforms to prevent abuse, the investigat­ion found.

Duncan’s denominati­on has a similar organizati­onal structure based on local church autonomy. And so, as the SBC’s abuse crisis came into public view, he came to a realizatio­n: No person or place is safe from predators.

“It made me sick,” Duncan said. “I just didn’t want to believe that it could be that rampant, that widespread.”

Leaders of other faith groups told the Chronicle that they’re also monitoring the SBC’s abuse crisis. Because the SBC’s decentrali­zed structure is emblematic of many other Protestant faiths, the SBC’s problems could be a bellwether for church leaders across the country, experts said.

“When you watch the Southern Baptist Convention wrestle with how to protect people from sexual predators, you’re watching something that’s really important to the rest of

this highly individual­istic and Protestant nation,” Terry Mattingly, a professor of religion at King’s College in New York, said during a recent podcast. “It’s important what Southern Baptists are doing. They could be creating a model.”

Malcolm Yarnell, a professor of systematic theology at Southweste­rn Baptist Theologica­l Seminary in Fort Worth, said local autonomy is rooted in the same distaste for monarchy that birthed American democracy. Many early Americans rejected the top-down leadership structure of the Catholic Church. They preferred their religion to be personal and individual­istic.

The doctrine is still embraced by many Protestant­s across the country, some of whom blamed the Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal on its structure or requiremen­ts that priests be celibate.

Yet Yarnell said he believes local church autonomy has masked the rate of abuse within the hundreds of thousands of decentrali­zed churches that, unlike in the Catholic Church, typically do not keep detailed records of allegation­s faced by church leaders.

“That has kept us from even seeing the problem,” he said. “And it’s only through the research, primarily of the newspapers, that we even understand we have a problem. … And, well, the problem is huge.”

Confrontin­g abuse

The belief in local church autonomy stymied attempts to institute broader safeguards to curb sex abuse more than a decade ago, when SBC leaders declined to develop a third-party database to track allegation­s against ministers, among other things.

Eleven years later, they’re again wrestling with those questions. Days after the Chronicle’s first report in February, SBC President J.D. Greear warned leaders that the findings likely account for only a fraction of the actual amount of abuse that occurs in SBC churches.

The SBC has since adopted reforms that explicitly state that churches led by sex offenders are

ineligible for SBC affiliatio­n. Multiple congregati­ons left the SBC this year, including a Houston church that was pastored by a convicted sex offender. In June, thousands of delegates from SBC churches also empowered a committee to make “inquiries” into churches over their handling of sex abuse, after which the churches could be removed from the SBC.

In Texas, Baptist leaders successful­ly pushed for new legislatio­n to prevent predators from moving from church to church by giving nonprofits immunity from lawsuits if they disclose former employees’ history of misconduct with one another “in good faith.”

The SBC’s public policy arm, the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, also said it would be more active in seeking statute of limitation­s reforms, which many survivors said prevented them from filing criminal charges against their alleged abusers. The group also overhauled its annual three-day meeting this year to focus exclusivel­y on abuse.

Yet SBC leaders are also quick to say that these are first steps that will be effective only if millions of Southern Baptists are part of a sweeping cultural change.

“Southern Baptists won’t have a future unless we are willing to acknowledg­e our tendency to protect the system over survivors,” Phillip Bethancour­t, vice president of the convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, said in October. “If the system is more important than the survivors, then the system is not

worth saving.”

Bethancour­t also cited a recent survey that found 1 in 10 young Protestant­s have left a church because they thought abuse wasn’t being taken seriously or because they did not feel safe — an alarming finding during a time of decreasing membership among most Christian faith groups.

Paying more attention

Unlike Baptist churches, which each enact their own policies for hiring pastors, performing background checks and handling sexual abuse complaints, Methodist churches all follow universal guidelines to prevent sexual abuse and deal with the aftermath. But there are still lessons to be learned from the SBC crisis, said Becky Posey Williams, senior director for sexual ethics and advocacy for the United Methodist Church.

“The Methodist Church would be wise to pay attention to the process that the Southern Baptist Convention has gone through, and use it as … checks and balances for reviewing where we are on this,” Williams said.

“I shiver at the thought that any denominati­on would ever get to the point where they would say, ‘Oh we never have to review this again,’ ” she added.

The Assemblies of God, which has 3.2 million members in the U.S. and nearly 70 million worldwide, reissued guidance policies for churches, citing the Chronicle’s findings.

“The report demonstrat­es that sexual misconduct is not restricted

New rules, laws

Since the Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News published “Abuse of Faith” in February, leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention and the Texas Legislatur­e have pushed for reform:

At the national level, SBC leaders have called for sweeping changes in how churches treat victims of abuse and have adopted a curriculum to help churches deal with allegation­s. The SBC’s public policy arm also overhauled its national three-day conference to focus on abuse.

At least a dozen state-level organizati­ons have adopted reforms ranging from resolution­s denouncing child abuse and those who conceal it to partnering with outside organizati­ons to develop better prevention measures. More than 1,400 churches and organizati­ons also have signed up for a program that provides background checks.

Churches have been ousted from or voluntaril­y left the convention because they employed convicted sex offenders or because of allegation­s that they mishandled abuse complaints.

Texas lawmakers approved legislatio­n that allows nonprofits to share misconduct allegation­s against former employees without being sued — an issue that the Chronicle found helped some predators move between unsuspecti­ng churches. Catholic leaders in Texas also supported the bill.

to Catholic priests, but affects all religious groups,” wrote Richard Hammer, the denominati­on’s longtime legal counsel. “The public revulsion at accounts of sexual misconduct by clergy and lay volunteers has reached a new and increasing­ly palpable level. The public is increasing­ly intolerant of the inadequate response by churches to incidents of sexual abuse.”

Representa­tives from the United Church of Christ also said they’re monitoring the SBC’s abuse crisis — although for different reasons.

The denominati­on has been particular­ly active on ministeria­l misconduct, and its regional bodies can investigat­e allegation­s against ordained ministers. But local churches are free to hire anyone they want, regardless of the person’s faith background.

“I’m always concerned when there’s lack of oversight on clergy credential­s, whether it’s a local church of our denominati­on or a local church of any denominati­on,” said Heather Kimmel, general counsel. “A position of power has the propensity to attract individual­s who will abuse that power, whether it’s financiall­y, sexually or emotionall­y.”

Boz Tchividjia­n, a lawyer and founder of GRACE, a nonprofit that equips churches to deal with abuse, said there has been a “significan­t uptick” in the number of churches that have reached out in the last year.

“There are some church leaders who are reading the newspaper, watching the news and going, ‘Oh my goodness, I don’t want to be that church, so let’s be proactive,’ ” he said. “I don’t care about the motivation if they genuinely change their culture. You have to change the DNA of the church, and that’s not going to happen overnight.”

Measuring that change in America’s decentrali­zed Protestant world is difficult, if not impossible. Activists say that survivors have been increasing­ly willing to come forward, which they credit to media exposure and online communitie­s that can be a haven for those dealing with trauma.

“This is endemic,” said Christine Fox Parker, who runs PorchSwing Ministries, a nonprofit that assists victims of sexual and spiritual abuse. “There are no difference­s in denominati­ons. This happens everywhere.”

Yet she said there’s still a reluctance to act among those with the power to drive sweeping cultural changes.

“Church leaders aren’t listening to survivors until the media tells their story for them,” she said. “They listen to the news and they listen to lawsuits. And it breaks my heart. Because God is listening. God is listening all of the time.”

 ?? Jon Shapley / Staff photograph­er ?? “My heart breaks for the ones he stole their innocence from,” Jodi McAllister said after watching an interview with a sex offender at the SBC’s Caring Well Conference in October in Grapevine.
Jon Shapley / Staff photograph­er “My heart breaks for the ones he stole their innocence from,” Jodi McAllister said after watching an interview with a sex offender at the SBC’s Caring Well Conference in October in Grapevine.

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