The Southern Baptist Convention has been in the national news (again) this month, and I am reflecting here upon that denomination with which I was directly connected for sixty years.
The Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) was formed in 1845 at
a gathering in Augusta, Georgia. It was founded by Baptists who disagreed with the antislavery attitudes and activities of Baptists
in the North.
In 1967, the SBC became the largest Protestant
denomination in the U.S., surpassing the Methodist Church. Its peak membership
of around 16,300,000 was reached in 2006.
I began attending an SBC church in 1945, exactly 100
years after its founding. I didn’t know anything about the SBC’s beginning for
a long time, and I wasn’t happy when I finally learned about the reason it was
organized.
Still, I was happy to be a Southern Baptist during the ten
years I attended the SBC church in my northwest Missouri hometown. I was happy
with the vibrancy of the SBC as I knew it in the 1950s and remember well the
nationwide membership drive for “a million more in ’54.”
And I was happy to graduate from two Southern Baptist
colleges in my home state (Southwest Baptist and William Jewell)—and then go on
to The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (SBTS) in Louisville, Kentucky.
During my years as an undergraduate and then as a graduate student
at SBTS (1959~66), I was happy to serve as pastor of two small-town Southern
Baptist churches in Kentucky, Ekron BC (1959~63) and Clay City BC (1964-65).
Further, June and I were happy to be appointed in 1966 as SBC
missionaries to Japan, and during our 38 years there we greatly appreciated the
support of SBC churches through the Cooperative Program and the Lottie Moon
Christmas Offering.
A strong shift to the right in the SBC began in 1980. As
a result, I increasingly became an embarrassed Southern Baptist,** and in the
1980s and early 1990s many respected SB professors and pastors, including some close
friends, left the SBC.
Disgruntled Southern Baptists formed the Alliance of
Baptists in 1987 and the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship in 1991. One of the co-founders
of the former was Dr. C. Welton Gaddy, who died on June 7 at the age of 81.
Gaddy and I were graduate students at SBTS at the same time,
but I didn’t know him well (he was three years younger than I). But I remember
him as a bright, talented young man.
The sub-heading of a June
16 New York Times article about Gaddy states, “He started out in the Southern Baptist Convention, but when
that group took a sharp conservative turn he became a voice for tolerance and
diversity.”
Gaddy was known
nationwide because of serving as president of the prestigious Interfaith
Alliance from 1997 to 2014. Had it not been for that “sharp conservative turn”
in the SBC, he could have served in that position as a Southern Baptist.
The 2023 annual meeting of the SBC was held earlier this month, and there was much that needed attention, such as last year’s half-million decline in membership. (Unlike “a million more in ’54” they could have talked about “why so few in ’22?”.)
But the action that garnered the most interest in the news
media was the SBC’s renewed objection to female pastors. Rick Warren, the retired
pastor of Saddleback Church in California, made an appeal for that megachurch
to be restored to membership in the SBC.
Not only was Warren’s appeal rejected, opposition to female
pastors even intensified. On June 22, The Washington Post published an opinion piece
by Warren. It was titled “Expulsion
of female pastors will only speed the Southern Baptists’ decline.”
The nationally known SB pastor remarked that the votes at
this year’s annual meeting “helped ensure that the once great SBC will be known
as the Shrinking Baptist Convention.”
Even though I’m glad not to be a Southern Baptist now, I
still am sad because of the recent decline in the SBC and the likelihood that
there will be even greater decline in the decade ahead because of its stance on
women pastors—as well as because of its being a hotbed for the MAGA Movement.
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** In my book Fed Up with Fundamentalism, first published in 2007, I included a short section titled “An Embarrassed Southern Baptist” (see p. 5 in the revised/updated 2020 edition).