The Commercial Appeal

Executive committee discusses, votes on key issues at meeting

Finances, role of women as pastors among topics

- Liam Adams Nashville Tennessean USA TODAY Network – Tennessee

As the Southern Baptist Convention continues to deal with the aftermath of a historic report on abuse, the SBC Executive Committee discussed a discouragi­ng financial audit and voted on key measures at a meeting Tuesday.

The executive committee is comprised of about 30 staff and an 86-member board of elected representa­tives and manages denominati­on business outside the SBC annual meeting.

For more than a year, the executive committee has dealt with business related to a third-party investigat­ion by Guidepost Solutions into the Nashvilleb­ased SBC and a subsequent report published last May with Guidepost’s findings.

Here are three other key moments from the committee’s meeting.

“For the future, this trustee board (executive committee) will have to make difficult decisions to avoid going into a direction that cannot be sustained.” Dwight Easler

SBC Executive Committee member

Audit paints worrisome picture

The executive committee’s liquid assets decreased by $6 million last fiscal year, mainly through costs incurred by abuse related legal expenses, executive committee members and staff explained at a session Tuesday.

The 50% loss in cash is evidence the current model for financing abuse response is “unsustaina­ble,” executive committee interim CFO Mike Bianchi said Tuesday, relaying the auditors’ assessment.

The steep decline in assets followed legal expenses to deal with a U.S. Department of Justice investigat­ion into the SBC and legal liabilitie­s. The SBC is facing several abuse related lawsuits in which plaintiffs reference Guidepost’s report as evidence against the SBC.

“For the future, this trustee board (executive committee) will have to make difficult decisions to avoid going into a direction that cannot be sustained,” executive committee member Dwight Easler told fellow committee members Tuesday.

Bianchi said executive committee staff are considerin­g future financial alternativ­es and workaround­s, such as asset liquidatio­n and pursuing other funding sources.

Baptist Press revisions approved

Executive committee members approved recommenda­tions about Baptist Press to ensure the newspaper is free of undue influence.

Though it operates as an independen­t news service, Baptist Press receives funding from the executive committee. Guidepost’s investigat­ion found that previous executive committee staff and legal counsel exerted pressure on how Baptist Press wrote certain stories about abuse.

The recommenda­tions approved Tuesday establish clearer guidelines between Baptist Press and leadership at the executive committee and other Sbcaffilia­ted agencies. There will also be an advisory team that Baptist Press can consult for stories on sensitive issues.

Rob Collingswo­rth, who made a motion at the 2022 SBC annual meeting calling for a review of Baptist Press, said he was satisfied with the outcome.

“The SBC is healthiest when our news service has the independen­ce to tell not only the good stories about our work around the world, but also the hard stories that keep Southern Baptists informed and aware of what’s happening in our churches and entities,” Collingswo­rth said in a statement.

Female pastor constituti­onal change discussed

Executive committee members had an initial discussion on a campaign growing in popularity throughout the SBC, the nation’s largest Protestant denominati­on, calling for constituti­onal changes related to female pastors.

Virginia Pastor Mike Law penned and circulated a letter that 2,000-plus supportive Southern Baptists have signed. The group wants to completely ban women from holding the role or title of pastor through a constituti­onal amendment.

The momentum behind Law’s campaign has led to discussion­s at state convention­s and a response from SBC President Bart Barber. Proponents of the amendment are trying to get the proposal before Southern Baptist voting delegates, called messengers, for a vote at the SBC annual meeting in June.

But first it must clear the executive committee, which will decide on whether the item can go before the full convention. Executive committee members will make a decision before the annual meeting.

Law’s campaign has touched a nerve in the SBC amid a debate about women in leadership. On Tuesday, the executive committee voted to disfellows­hip five churches that has women serving as lead or senior pastors, including wellknown Saddleback Church in California.

The SBC statement of beliefs, called the Baptist Faith and Message 2000, already says women cannot serve as pastors. A constituti­onal amendment would codify that and create a strict standard for church affiliatio­n with the SBC.

Liam Adams covers religion for The Tennessean. Reach him at ladams@tennessean.com.

 ?? PHOTOS BY GEORGE WALKER IV/THE TENNESSEAN ?? Executive committee members raise their hands in praise during the Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee meeting Monday in Nashville.
PHOTOS BY GEORGE WALKER IV/THE TENNESSEAN Executive committee members raise their hands in praise during the Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee meeting Monday in Nashville.
 ?? ?? President of the Southern Baptist Convention Bart Barber addresses the Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee meeting Monday in Nashville.
President of the Southern Baptist Convention Bart Barber addresses the Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee meeting Monday in Nashville.

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