Houston Chronicle

SBC leaders cut ties with LGBTQ-friendly church

- By Peter Smith

The Southern Baptist Convention­s’ top administra­tive body voted to cut ties with two congregati­ons Tuesday — an LGBTQ-friendly church in North Carolina that had itself quit the denominati­on decades ago and a New Jersey congregati­on it cited for “alleged discrimina­tory behavior.”

The votes of the Executive Committee came at the end of a two-day meeting in Nashville, Tenn., even as the committee copes with a Department of Justice investigat­ion. The federal-level scrutiny follows a blistering report by a consultant earlier this year into sexual abuse in Southern Baptist settings and mistreatme­nt of survivors by past Executive Committee officials.

The committee on Tuesday approved a statement that College Park Baptist Church of Greensboro, N.C., was not in “friendly cooperatio­n” due to its “open affirmatio­n, approval and endorsemen­t of homosexual behavior,” which conflicts with the denominati­on’s theologica­l conservati­ve positions.

In fact, College Park had voted in 1999 to leave the denominati­on, and its website makes a point of stating it’s not a member of the Southern Baptist Convention but rather of more progressiv­e Baptist bodies.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear why the Executive Committee decided now to put the matter to a vote. But Executive Committee Chairman Jared Wellman said afterward that the convention still had the congregati­on on its rolls until now.

On its website, the church describes itself as an “LGBTQIA Affirming Baptist Church” and says it “fully welcomes and affirms all persons without distinctio­n regarding race, ethnicity, national origin, class, sexual orientatio­n, gender identity, or any other human category.”

The committee, in a separate vote, declared that Amazing Grace Community Church of Franklinvi­lle, N.J., was no longer in friendly cooperatio­n. It cited its “lack of cooperatio­n … to resolve concerns regarding alleged discrimina­tory behavior.”

Requests for comment from both congregati­ons via phone and email were not immediatel­y returned.

Since Baptist congregati­ons are self-governing, the denominati­on can’t force them to follow its policies, but it can effectivel­y expel them by declaring them not in “friendly cooperatio­n” if they don’t conform to denominati­onal stances in particular areas, such as for pro-LGBTQ polices, alleged support for racism or alleged failure in responding adequately to child sexual abuse, such as employing offenders as pastors.

There could be more congregati­ons in the last category in the pipeline.

The committee learned that more than 200 referrals had been made to a newly establishe­d hotline about alleged mishandlin­g of abuse cases by SBC churches or organizati­ons.

That news came from the Abuse Reform Implementa­tion Task Force — created after the release of consultant Guidepost Solutions’ scathing report earlier this year into the sexual abuse of children in SBC settings and the mistreatme­nt of survivors by the Executive Committee.

Mike Keahbone, vice chair of the task force, said it is working to hire personnel to receive and investigat­e reports of abuse and of mishandlin­g abuse in Southern Baptist circles.

 ?? Jon Shapley/Staff file photo ?? People worship at the SBC’s 2022 annual meeting, held June 14 in Anaheim, Calif.
Jon Shapley/Staff file photo People worship at the SBC’s 2022 annual meeting, held June 14 in Anaheim, Calif.

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