From Watershed Moment to Apocalypse Now
A warning from Southern Baptist history to the rest of us
Last week, I was planning to write about the newly-released report of sexual abuse in the Southern Baptist Convention, but the murders in Uvalde, Texas proved overwhelming. The story about Southern Baptists, however, is also quite important. Although it is quickly fading from the mainstream media, it shouldn’t be forgotten. The Washington Post called it a “portrait of brutal misogyny,” claiming the “utter failure to prioritize abused women and children is the largest crisis of institutional religion in the United States.”
I don’t recall the specific date in late summer 1985 — but I remember exactly where I was standing. In the sunshine, near the windows in the library of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. I was pulling Gustaf Aulén's Christus Victor from the shelves when my favorite theology professor approached me.
We chatted briefly, and then he asked, “Do you know what’s going on in the Southern Baptist Convention?” He was holding a recent copy of Christianity Today. He pointed to a news story in the open magazine.
I was from California, not exactly Southern Baptist territory. But I knew a little. A surprising number of my classmates at this Massachusetts seminary were from North Carolina and Georgia. And they talked incessantly about the “fundamentalist takeover” of their denomination. The Southern Baptists had just held their annual national meeting. They’d elected another fundamentalist president and defeated a bid by SBC moderates to regain their voice in the church. It was big news and would later be seen as a “watershed moment” in the SBC.
“A bit,” I confessed. Everybody knew about the takeover. For about a decade, Southern Baptist fundamentalists had engineered an institutional and theological political effort to eliminate moderates and liberals from church leadership, Baptist colleges and seminaries, and all SBC organizations. They’d been relentless — and successful.
“Since you’re going to be studying American religion in graduate school, this news is important.” He paused, and then said with a particularly gleeful emphasis:
“It is the first time in history that conservatives have ever succeeded in turning back liberalism in a major denomination. Every conservative — every evangelical — who wants to return their church to orthodoxy needs to understand and imitate what they are doing. We should all ‘be’ Southern Baptists now.”
And then he smiled — perhaps the most malevolent smile I’ve ever seen.
It was almost as if he predicted the next thirty years of American Protestantism.
* * * * *
If 1985 was the SBC’s watershed, May 22, 2022 marks what former Southern Baptist leader Russell Moore angrily called “the Southern Baptist apocalypse.”
Moore’s essay includes a nostalgic memory of the history of the Southern Baptist takeover — “the convention was saved from liberalism.” This is the key passage:
The Patterson-Pressler meeting happened in 1967, and in the decades that followed, the two men hatched a plan to unify Southern Baptists conservatives and manipulate institutional procedures to take over America’s largest Protestant denomination. It was brash — and it was a long game. Of this history, Jonathan Merritt wrote in The Atlantic:
The two men successfully executed their strategy in the subsequent decades, a movement they labeled the “Conservative Resurgence” and their opponents dubbed the “Fundamentalist Takeover.” Whatever one calls it, the result was a purging of moderates from among denominational ranks, the codifying of literal interpretations of the Bible, and the transformation of the Southern Baptist Convention into a powerful ally of the Republican Party.
It was a massive victory in both church and state — and it had consequences in American history that are still yet to unfold. No wonder the Café du Monde episode achieved mythic status for conservative Southern Baptists like Russell Moore. No fundamentalists had ever managed to do what they’d done: win it all. They turned back the theological and social clock in a huge denomination and they turned their church into the most significant power broker in the Republican party.
While I appreciate Mr. Moore’s wrestling with the Southern Baptist Convention in the last few years, and, in particular grappling with this originating myth, it is necessary to point out that Patterson and Pressler never intended to “save” anything.
Except one thing: male power — their authority — as absolute leaders in church and state.
It was always about exerting control — especially about controlling women.
And there’s nothing mythological about that.
It is the way patriarchy always works.
* * * * *
Southern Baptists may like the myth about saving their church from liberalism. But there’s something Baptists don’t like: creeds.
Oddly enough, a “creed” plays a central role in this story of the Fundamentalist takeover of the Southern Baptist Convention.
Since their beginnings in the 17th century, Baptists have emphasized freedom of conscience, personal experience, and separation of church and state. In the 1600s, established religious leaders — especially Calvinists and Anglicans — worried that the Baptists’ radical passion for soul liberty would upset God’s design of male leadership in government, church, and family. And the Baptists did nothing to assuage such fears, especially as their ideals helped fuel democratic revolutions in both England and the American colonies.
The Baptist commitment to liberty also shaped a revolution among Christian women — empowering them to exercise their spiritual gifts and take up leadership in the emerging religious movement. Indeed, one of the first attacks leveled at Baptists in England was that they scandalously allowed for “she-preachers,” including one Mrs. Attaway, whose Tuesday afternoon Bible lectures in 1645 attracted as many as a thousand eager listeners (Mrs. Attaway sounds like Beth Moore’s foremother!). Baptist women were among the greatest radicals of a revolutionary century — and they preached a gospel of visionary egalitarianism based in biblical injections like “your daughters will prophesy” and “there is no longer male and female in Christ Jesus.”
Critics of these women — the collared divines trained in universities — saw a connection between democratic revolution and female radicalism. According to one contemporary pamphlet, the women preachers:
have lately advanced themselves with vain-glorious arrogance, to preach in mixed congregations of men and women, in an insolent way, so usurping authority over men, and assuming a calling unwarranted by the word of God for women to use: yet all under the colour, that they all as the Spirit moves them; wherein they highly wrong and abuse the motions of the blessed Spirit, to make him to be the author of so much schism, disorder, and confusion; they being rather led by the strong delusions of the prince of darkness, to countenance their ignorance, pride, and vain-glory.
Radical women meant disordered society; only a chaotic society would permit such ungodly women to “usurp authority over men.” The only solution was to quote scripture back to women — texts about women being silent, not holding authority, and the call for wives to submit to their husbands — and to put them in jail.
Baptist radicalism didn’t get too far in England — a world tightly controlled by the Church of England — but it took root in the fertile spiritual soil of England’s American settlements. In the colonies (and later in the United States), the Baptists kept their egalitarian edge with women, the poor, and the enslaved — those whose souls longed for genuine liberty — and navigated its outsider status to become one of the most dominant forms of Protestantism in the majority Protestant young nation.
But Baptist success would eventually mean Baptist compromise. And compromise Baptists did, especially in the South, where, as they became richer, socially respectable, and politically influential, Baptist men adopted the hierarchy of privilege of their Anglican overlords, a hierarchy of gender, status, and race based on a biblical passage in Ephesians: Men as the head of state, church, and family; women as submissive (but not equal) partners; children as obedient offspring; and slaves as dutiful possessions of their masters.
Thus, Baptists in the American South eventually became Southern Baptists — a denomination where a culture of southern patriarchy and deference prevailed. That culture had originated in Anglican prerogative and entitlement, and it was not native to Baptists’ own egalitarian religious movement. Yet, hierarchy reshaped the very meaning and practice of being Baptist, and it displaced spiritual freedom by replacing it with a profound commitment — a sacred duty really — to submission and enslavement.
Perhaps not surprisingly, Baptist leaders continued to insist that they were a “non-hierarchical” association (no creeds! no bishops! no liturgies!) even while they moved toward ever-more rigid forms of patriarchy and racial superiority. We all like to believe we are faithful stewards of the tradition we inherit, even when we’re not.
As an aspect of their stated dislike of hierarchy, Southern Baptists would not write creeds, but they would develop an outline of faith — a statement called Baptist Faith and Message, a kind of “non-creed” creed. The first version was issued in 1925 during the heyday of the Fundamentalist-Modernist crisis. A 1963 revision toned down the fundamentalism of the older statement, articulating more strongly Baptist latitude in doctrine that favored the liberty of conscience. Eventually, Southern Baptist hardliners — like Patterson and Pressler of Russell Moore’s mythology narrative — would define latitude as liberalism. They’d see the 1963 statement as problematic, a kind of open door toward a less biblical church. In the late 1970s, they launched a crusade to change it. And that would involve taking over the denomination.
Among their first targets were women — the Baptist women in ministry (by 1987, approximately 500 women had been ordained in the SBC) and, most especially, women in the home. Southern Baptist fundamentalists busied themselves by creating an entire movement called “complementarianism,” a theological doctrine of equal-but-separate sexes based in the “joyful submission” of wives and the restriction of female authority. In 1998, they succeeded in adding a new article to Baptist Faith and Message on the theology of the family:
The husband and wife are of equal worth before God, since both are created in God’s image. The marriage relationship models the way God relates to His people. A husband is to love his wife as Christ loved the church. He has the God-given responsibility to provide for, to protect, and to lead his family. A wife is to submit herself graciously to the servant leadership of her husband even as the church willingly submits to the headship of Christ.
They enshrined hierarchy and patriarchy in their non-creed creed, making “headship” and wifely “gracious” submission the heart of Southern Baptist faith.
The fallout was swift. Moderates left the Southern Baptist Convention and formed a separate denomination. Trusted PBS journalist Bill Moyers called the conservatives “theological Stalinists” and former President Jimmy Carter renounced his association with the church. Carter would later explain that he left because of the SBC’s views on women:
At its most repugnant, the belief that women must be subjugated to the wishes of men excuses slavery, violence, forced prostitution, genital mutilation and national laws that omit rape as a crime. But it also costs many millions of girls and women control over their own bodies and lives, and continues to deny them fair access to education, health, employment and influence within their own communities.
But Patterson and Pressler were jubilant. They’d won. As if to seal the deal, in 2000, Paige Patterson (who has been implicated in the scandal) led 550 couples in a mass ceremony to renew their wedding vows where, “Wives reciprocated, in one accord, pledging to graciously submit and honor their husband’s role as servant leader while acknowledging their responsibilities as wife and mother ‘as priority above all else except God.’”
“We are convinced that a denial or neglect of these principles,” according to a statement crafted and signed by many Southern Baptist leaders, “will lead to increasingly destructive consequences in our families, our churches, and the culture at large.”
If society is in trouble, blame the women. Every problem goes back to Eve, the sinner, the temptress. Bring the women in line, and the culture will be restored to its proper order.
The Southern Baptist Convention became exactly what Paige Patterson and Paul Pressler hoped it would be — and exactly what Bill Moyers and Jimmy Carter feared it would become.
The Southern Baptist sex scandal isn’t about a few flawed men. It isn’t about a lot of flawed men. It isn’t about flawed leadership or flawed policies. It is a “success” story of the theological vision and social structure that Patterson and Pressler planned.
I doubt they specifically planned abuse, since they always offered the codicil that their hierarchy depends on the clause, “as Christ loved the church.” But it wound up that way. Because physical and sexual abuse is a feature of the system. Religious hierarchy has always been used against women, and it has been used to diminish their status as human beings. Since Eve. Having been scapegoated for social sin, political disorder, and cultural change, women were targeted for dominance and control, complete with the imperative to submit — abuse is the only possible result.
This can’t be fixed or addressed without a theological revolution of inclusivity and egalitarianism — a revolution that the SBC rejected when it embraced the plan hatched at Café du Monde.
Put simply, the Southern Baptist Convention doesn’t just have a sexual abuse problem. It has a theological problem that generated a sexual abuse problem.*
I’m not sorry that Southern Baptist history has been demythologized. The story was the worst possible folk tale of the evil of liberal women preachers and the heroism of crusading male pastors.
There is, however, a myth that remains even after this horrible report. One that Russell Moore doesn’t seem to recognize: the myth of benign patriarchy.
Benign patriarchy doesn’t exist. Hierarchies — especially theological ones based in gender — always wind up oppressing and abusing someone. That isn’t a myth. It isn’t even a parable. This is a tragic, depressing, vile, and often repeated history. The Southern Baptist Convention has reminded us of all this. They didn’t save the church from liberalism. They subjected innocent people to a lifetime of suffering. They’ve sounded a warning of what happens when a body politic seeks to restore order by rebuilding a hierarchical pyramid of power. That’s a lesson we should all heed.
* A note: Liberal institutions also have problems with abuse — but those issues and patterns do not originate with the particular theological vision or interpretation of the Bible operative in the SBC. In liberal communities, abuse arises from different circumstances and can be mitigated by different guardrails and policies. Also, there are liberal hierarchical religious groups or organizations — “liberal” and “hierarchical” is a difficult, perhaps even contradictory, tension to maintain, especially regarding power and authority, that also can result in abuse.
INSPIRATION
It wasn't bliss. What was bliss
but the ordinary life? She'd spend hours
in patter, moving through whole days
touching, sniffing, tasting . . . exquisite
housekeeping in a charmed world.
And yet there was always
more of the same, all that happiness,
the aimless Being There. . . .
— Rita Dove, from her longer poem about Eve, “I Have Been a Stranger in a Strange Land”
Close to the gates of Paradise I flee;
The night is hot and serpents leave their beds,
And slide along the dark, crooking their heads,—
My God, my God, open the gates to me!
My eyes are burning so I cannot see;
My feet are bleeding and I suffer pain;
Let me come in on the cool grass again—
My God, my God, open the gates to me!
I ate the fruit of the forbidden tree,
And was cast out into the barren drouth;
And since – the awful taste within my mouth!
My God, my God, open the gates to me!
Am I shut out for all eternity?
I do repent me of my one black sin,
With prayers and tears of blood . . . Let me come in!
My God, my God, open the gates to me!
Let me come in where birds and flowers be;
Let me once more lie naked in the grass
That trembles when the long wind-ripples pass!
Lord God, Lord God, open the gates to me!
— Ella Higginson, “Eve”
Higginson was born in 1861 in Kansas, grew up in Oregon, and eventually moved to Washington. She was a well-known poet and essayist, a women’s rights activist, and a noted Progressive leader. She was the first woman elected to the Washington State legislature. This poem uses a biblical story to argue for women’s suffrage.
COTTAGE NEWS
SAVE THE DATE — Thursday, June 23 at 4PM eastern/1PM pacific
Bill McKibben joins the Cottage monthly Zoom gathering to talk about his wonderful new book, The Flag, the Cross, and the Station Wagon — and we can probably get him to share about his new venture, Third Act.
This live event is for paid subscribers only. Links will be sent out “day of” about three hours in advance of the event (I’ll remind you between now and then!).
If you can’t make it, a recording will be sent out to everyone on the paid list about 24 hours after the gathering.
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RICHARD ROHR and the Center for Action and Contemplation featured my book Freeing Jesus in their Daily Meditation on May 31. The devotion, called Seeing Jesus Again, includes this quote from a recent podcast I did with Brian McLaren:
There’s one verse in Hebrews that says “Jesus Christ is the same, yesterday, today, and forever” [Hebrews 13:8], I have not stayed the same yesterday, today, and forever. The church does not stay the same yesterday, today, and forever. And so, in a very real way, Jesus has changed for me. Jesus changes for the world. Jesus changes for the institutions of faith, for the church. . .
If you are looking for a good theology beach read, Freeing Jesus fits the bill! The podcast is linked in the meditation.
A PERSONAL UPDATE: My husband, Richard, is recovering from COVID and I remain virus-free! Thank you all so much for your good wishes, advice, and prayers. We’ve both been fully vaccinated including boosters and strongly urge you to do the same. Also, please consider wearing masks indoors in areas of significant transmission. When you attend events, keep in mind that the pandemic isn’t over. Remember that many, many people are still at risk of severe illness and death. Even if others don’t seem to care about the good health of our communities and neighbors, we can make a better choice. Every consideration matters.
Baptist church plants are everywhere in my community, including Southern Baptists from the U.S. Often they are very cagey on their websites about their beliefs in regards to gender, sexual orientation, etc. I always tell people who ask me about these seemingly contemporary churches to a) ask a whole lot of questions and b)watch who is in leadership and what that says about the community. People often find they have invested their hearts and minds in a community only to discover that they are not seen as equally gifted and that they are not welcome in multiple roles. The realization can be very hurtful. Sadly the hurt may keep them from ever finding their way to a community of faith that will affirm them and their gifts and call on them in all aspects of the life of the church. On the other hand, I am seeing some movement in some of these evangelical communities to leave complementarianism, patriarchy and anti-gay sentiment behind and evolve into something different. I happily share with these folks the United Church of Canada's experience in this regard.
I've been seething about Russell Moore ever since his last appearance on Amanpour & Co. He made the cringe-inducing statement that he's been "working within the system/process for 50 years." Moore is 50 years old. Sorry, but I'm not buying that he was challenging the system as an infant, toddler or middle schooler. Just... sir, please!
And until he removes his signature from the Nashville Statement, he can't claim squat. As long as he's shoveling complementarianism, Moore is propping up the system that nurtures abusers. He's fortifying the scaffolding of male authority, which sent Baptist women home to men who tried to kill them.
The NS denounces homosexuality and transgenderism bc both undermine the theology of birthright male headship.
Moore should either come all the way into the light or stop whispering apologies from the shadows.