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In 2016 I offered this resolution at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention. It did not make it out of the committee. It seems highly relevant today. Nothing in here violates our polity or any other aspect of our ecclesiology whatsoever. The resolution respects local church autonomy while recognizing that autonomous churches have the right not to be affiliated with wrongdoing churches.
On Sexual Predation in the
Southern Baptist Family
May 17, 2016
Whereas
any act of sexual predation is a sin and an abomination, and many acts of
sexual predation constitute crimes; and,
Whereas
all fifty states, the District of Columbia, American Samoa, Guam, the Northern
Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U. S. Virgin Islands have laws requiring
certain professionals to report suspected sexual abuse of children, and
twenty-seven states specifically require clergy to report suspected sexual
abuse of children; and,
Whereas
Article XVII of The Baptist Faith &
Message expresses our common belief that “it is the duty of Christians to
render loyal obedience [to our civil government] in all things not contrary to
the revealed will of God”; and,
Whereas
God has commanded us to “submit yourselves for the Lord’s sake to every human
institution, whether to a king as the one in authority, or to governors as sent
by him for the punishment of evildoers and the praise of those who do right” (1
Peter 2:13-14, NASB); and,
Whereas
Article XV of The Baptist Faith &
Message expresses our common desire to “oppose…all forms of sexual
immorality”; and,
Whereas
God has commanded us to address sin on the part of elders, when sufficiently
corroborated, with public rebuke and to do so without bias or partiality (1
Timothy 5:19-21); and,
Whereas
Article VI of The Baptist Faith &
Message affirms our common belief that pastors must be those “qualified by
Scripture,” which reminds us that pastors must be “above reproach” and “the
husband of one wife” (1 Timothy 3:2, HCSB); and,
Whereas
anecdotal reports of predatory sexual behavior toward both minor and adult
members of churches by clergy or church staff are widespread; and,
Whereas
woefully common are anecdotal reports of efforts by churches to prevent the
reporting of predatory sexual behavior to legal authorities, to hide sexual
misconduct from the members of churches, or to forestall the public release of
information regarding sexual misconduct on the part of church leaders; and,
Whereas
such reports, when they involve churches in friendly cooperation with the
Southern Baptist Convention, damage the Convention’s credibility in its efforts
to call to salvation a world full of people who are enslaved to sin and are often
involved in destructive sexual practices; and,
Whereas
failure to mourn over and take appropriate disciplinary action toward
persistent, unrepentant sin is evidence of spiritual arrogance (1 Corinthians
5:2); and,
Whereas
the Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention has reported to the
Convention in 2008 that “The governing documents [of the Convention] in their
present form already permit messengers attending any annual meeting to move to
withdraw fellowship from any affiliated church for any reason,” and that, “declaring
a church not to be in ‘friendly cooperation’ with the Convention would
certainly be justified in any specific case where a church intentionally
employed a known sexual offender or knowingly placed one in a position of
leadership over children or other vulnerable participants in its ministries”;
now, therefore, be it
Resolved
that we, the messengers of the 2016 Southern Baptist Convention meeting in St.
Louis, Missouri, regard any pastor’s involvement in any extramarital sexual
relationship to be disqualifying for the office of pastor, and that we further
regard any pastor’s involvement in any sexual relationship with any member of
his church other than his wife to constitute an abuse of his pastoral authority
over the congregant, a betrayal of his pastoral relationship with the entire
congregation, and a reproach upon his service in the office of pastor; and be
it further
Resolved
that we regard such misconduct to be so severe as to warrant action by churches
to terminate the employment of pastors who behave thusly and to revoke their
ordinations; and be it further
Resolved
that churches who knowingly ordain or hire into pastoral office those who
behave thusly are churches whose faith and practice do not identify closely
with The Baptist Faith & Message
as it pertains to pastoral qualifications; and be it further
Resolved
that churches who knowingly prevent people from reporting cases of sexual
misconduct are churches whose faith and practice do not identify closely with The Baptist Faith & Message as it
pertains to the role of God-ordained civil government; and be it further
Resolved
that we encourage fellow believers to consider whether churches and parachurch
ministries that have demonstrated a pattern of placing sexual predators into
positions of influence or intimidating or otherwise silencing victims of sexual
predation are unworthy of support or patronage unless they repent; and be it
further
Resolved
that we humbly call to the attention of the various boards of trustees, state
conventions, local associations, and local churches within the Southern Baptist
family the degree to which churches and parachurch ministries who willfully enable,
tolerate, or cover up sexual misconduct are corrosive to the collective
Southern Baptist witness to the gospel of Jesus Christ; and be it further
Resolved
that we affirm a consideration of the highest standard of ethics regarding the
prevention and reporting of sexual predation as relevant information when
considering “all questions of cooperation among the different entities of the
Convention, and among the entities of the Convention and those of other conventions,
whether state or national”; and be it further
Resolved
that we would benefit greatly from hearing the stories of churches and
institutions who have handled well the discovery of sexual misconduct in their
congregations; and be it further
Resolved
that, recognizing that false accusations of sexual predation do sometimes
occur, we affirm thorough investigation by trained investigators working for
the proper authorities rather than avoidance or suppression of accusations as
the most reliable means to discover both false accusations and valid
accusations for what they are; and be it further
Resolved
that we commend to those who have acted as sexual predators the way of
regeneration for those who are lost, and for all, repentance, spiritual growth,
and vigorous accountability in a church family as the only hope for victory
over the pernicious snare of sexual temptation; and be it finally
Resolved
that we humbly and gently commend the way of apology and repentance to our
sister churches and to various parachurch institutions who have failed to
handle appropriately the discovery of sexual misconduct in their congregations
or institutions.
1 comment:
SMH. An SWBTS trustee who was incapable of providing diligent oversight of a seminary now wants to excercise oversight of autonomous baptist churches on matters of sexual predation? Get real.
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