The Commercial Appeal

Southern Baptist leader lays out plans for reform

Greear outlines 10 recommenda­tions

- Holly Meyer Nashville Tennessean USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

NASHVILLE – Southern Baptist leaders are pushing ahead with plans to address a sexual abuse crisis that is rocking the nation’s largest Protestant denominati­on.

J.D. Greear, president of the Southern Baptist Convention, unveiled a series of proposed reforms this week aimed at holding congregati­ons and their leaders accountabl­e for protecting those that attend their churches.

The steps could include expelling some churches that have a “wanton disregard for prevention of sexual abuse.”

“If we don’t get this right, our churches will not be a safe place for the lost. That is not something that I am OK with,” Greear told the Southern Baptist Convention’s Executive Committee in Nashville. “I know that it is not something that you’re OK with either.”

Greear, who leads The Summit Church in North Carolina, outlined 10 recommenda­tions for change. They are the first proposals to come out of the sexual abuse advisory group Greear formed last year.

The changes range from providing free training for ministry leaders and encouragin­g churches to review their policies on abuse to calling for a reexaminat­ion of the ordination process.

The proposed reforms come as Southern Baptists grapple with their own sexual abuse crisis.

The Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-news recently published a startling report showing that 380 Southern Baptists with formal church roles have faced sexual misconduct allegation­s in the last 20 years. Many were convicted of sex crimes and some are still in prison, but others continue to work in churches, the news organizati­ons found.

“We need to regard any exposure, any shining of light on abuse, as our friend, even if it makes us ask some uncomforta­ble questions about ourselves publicly. Our job is to love and serve people, especially those who have suffered abuse,” Greear said. “Our job is not to protect our reputation.”

Leaders call for change

In the wake of that report, several Southern Baptist leaders, including Greear, called for change within the network of churches that make up the largest Protestant denominati­on in the U.S.

That call continued Monday night as Greear addressed the regularly scheduled meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Executive Committee.

“This is not a fabricated story that is made up by people with a secular agenda that is against us. We’ve not taken reports of abuse in our churches as seriously as our gospel demands that we do, and sometimes even worse, outright ignored or silenced victims,” Greear said. “We know that it is time that we backup our words with actions and we demonstrat­e our commitment to this.”

The recommenda­tions also include a call to repent for decades of inaction and to make sure abuse is a part of the discussion at the denominati­on’s annual meeting in Birmingham, Alabama, in June.

He called out 10 Southern Baptist churches by name, including Second Baptist Church in Houston, that were accused in recent media reports of having “displayed a wanton disregard for the seriousnes­s of abuse.”

Removal from convention possible for churches facing allegation­s

Greear said those churches and any others facing allegation­s need to be looked into and possibly removed from the Nashville-based Southern Baptist Convention.

“I am not calling for disfellows­hipping any of these churches at this point, but these churches must be called upon to give assurances to the Southern Baptist Convention that they have taken the necessary steps to correct their policies and procedures with regards to abuse and survivors,” Greear said.

As Greear made his way through the list of recommenda­tions, an occasional murmur of “amens” underscore­d a point he was trying to make. The end of his speech was met with a standing ovation.

Past actions ‘clearly not enough’

In September, the convention’s Executive Committee allocated $250,000 for the sexual abuse advisory group Greear created soon after he was elected in June. The advisory group’s purpose is to figure out how Southern Baptists can better respond to incidents and prevent abuse from happening.

Greear said he formed the group because church leaders have “known that there is a problem.”

“Whatever we’ve done in the past we know clearly was not enough,” he said.

The implementa­tion of all 10 recommenda­tions is not a done deal. One barrier could be the denominati­on’s structure, which has been cited as a hurdle for reform in the past. Southern Baptist’s believe in local church autonomy and not top-down control like some other Christian denominati­ons.

“In order to accomplish a lot of these things, everybody is going to have to come and play a role,” said Amy Whitfield, with Southeaste­rn Baptist Theologica­l Seminary, who spoke to the media Monday night alongside Greear and Russell Moore. “It’s kind of hard to identify one particular barrier, but it’s kind of everybody stepping up and agreeing to start going after this.”

Moore, who leads the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, also pointed to a lack of informatio­n sharing between churches as a challenge.

“I’m encouraged that

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? “Our job is to love and serve people, especially those who have suffered abuse,” J.D. Greear said. MARK HUMPHREY / AP
“Our job is to love and serve people, especially those who have suffered abuse,” J.D. Greear said. MARK HUMPHREY / AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States