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{{Short description|Christian denomination}} | |||
] | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2012}} | |||
{{Use American English|date=December 2017}} | |||
{{Infobox Christian denomination | |||
|name = Southern Baptist Convention | |||
|abbreviation=SBC; GCB | |||
|image =Southern Baptist Convention logo, mark only (2020).svg | |||
|imagewidth =150px | |||
|caption = | |||
|main_classification = ] | |||
|orientation = ] | |||
|theology = ] | |||
|polity = ] | |||
|founded_date = May 8–12, 1845 | |||
|founded_place = ], U.S. | |||
|leader_title = President | |||
|leader_name = Clint Pressley | |||
|separated_from = ] (1845) | |||
|separations = {{unbulleted list|]|]|]}} | |||
|area = ] | |||
|congregations = 46,906 (2023) | |||
|members = 12,982,090 (2023) | |||
<br />Weekly attendance = 4,050,668 (2023) | |||
|missionary organization = ] | |||
|aid = Southern Baptist Disaster Relief | |||
|other_names=Great Commission Baptists| website = {{URL|sbc.net}} | |||
}} | |||
{{Southern Baptists}} | |||
The '''Southern Baptist Convention''' ('''SBC'''), alternatively the '''Great Commission Baptists''' ('''GCB'''), is a ] based in the ]. It is the world's largest Baptist organization, the largest ], and the second-largest ].<ref name="Pipes-2016" />{{Sfn| Johnson | 2010 | p=349}} The SBC is a cooperation of fully autonomous, independent churches with commonly held essential beliefs that pool some resources for missions.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2006 |title=An Aid to Understanding |url=https://www.baptistpress.com/resource-library/news/an-aid-to-understanding-the-sbc/ |website=Baptist Press}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Southern Baptist Convention |title=Constitution |url=https://www.sbc.net/about/what-we-do/legal-documentation/constitution/ |website=Southern Baptist Convention |quote=While independent and sovereign in its own sphere, the Convention does not claim and will never attempt to exercise any authority over any other Baptist body, whether church, auxiliary organizations, associations, or convention.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Southern Baptist Convention |title=The Baptist Faith and Message 2000 |url=https://bfm.sbc.net/bfm2000/#xiv |website=Southern Baptist Convention |quote=Christ's people should, as occasion requires, organize such associations and conventions as may best secure cooperation for the great objects of the Kingdom of God. Such organizations have no authority over one another or over the churches. They are voluntary and advisory bodies designed to elicit, combine, and direct the energies of our people in the most effective manner.}}</ref> | |||
Churches affiliated with the denomination are ] in doctrine and practice, emphasizing the significance of the individual conversion experience. This conversion is then affirmed by the person being ] in water for a ]. Baptism is believed to be separate from salvation and is a public and symbolic expression of faith, burial of previous life, and resurrection to new life; it is not a requirement for salvation.<ref name="Reuters1" /><ref name="autonomy" /> The denomination has a male ]ate,<ref>{{Cite web |last=Diaz |first=Jaclyn |date=March 2, 2023 |title=What's next for the Southern Baptist Convention after it ousted 5 woman-led churches? |url=https://www.npr.org/2023/03/02/1159326721/southern-baptist-convention-ousts-5-female-led-churches |access-date=March 28, 2023 |website=]}}</ref> often citing ] as the reason it does not ]. All affiliated churches deny the legitimacy of ], saying that marriage can only be between a man and a woman and also that all sexual relations should occur only within the confines of marriage.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Merrell |first=Bill |date=September 1, 1999 |title=Redemption – Not Approval |url=https://www.baptistpress.com/resource-library/sbc-life-articles/redemption-not-approval/ |access-date=March 29, 2023 |website=] |language=en-US}}</ref> Other specific beliefs based on biblical interpretation vary by ], often to balance local church autonomy. | |||
The '''Southern Baptist Convention''' ('''SBC''') is a ]-based cooperative ministry agency serving ] churches around the world. The words ''Southern Baptist Convention'' refer both to the denomination and its annual meeting of delegates (referred to as "messengers", both at the national level and all lower levels as well). | |||
In 1845, the Southern Baptists separated from the ], as American society divided over racial attitudes and slavery.<ref name="Todd2022"/><ref name=Griswold>{{cite magazine|title=Southern Baptist Convention: How the Convention's battle over race reveals an emerging evangelical schism|url=https://www.newyorker.com/news/on-religion/the-fight-for-the-heart-of-the-southern-baptist-convention|magazine=The New Yorker|publisher=Condé Nast|first=Eliza|last=Griswold|date=June 10, 2021|access-date=August 17, 2023|quote=Founders of the new organization claimed that, according to the Bible, slavery was an institution of heaven. They pushed the idea that Black people were descended from the Biblical figure Ham, Noah's cursed son, and that their subjugation was therefore divinely ordained}}</ref><ref name="Southern Baptist Theological Seminary-2018" /><ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Newman |first=Mark |title=Getting Right With God: Southern Baptists and Desegregation, 1945–1995 |publisher=] |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-8173-1060-8 |pages=IX of preface}}</ref> In 1995, the denomination apologized for racial positions in its history,<ref>{{Cite news |last=Carter |first=Gary L. |date=1995-06-21 |title=An Apology For Racism |language=en-US |newspaper=Washington Post |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1995/06/21/an-apology-for-racism/25ce442e-8733-47de-85b1-0dd7c7fd62ec/ |access-date=2022-11-28 |issn=0190-8286}}</ref> and at present, the Southern Baptist Convention is racially diverse, with one in four congregations having a nonwhite majority.<ref name="Salmon2008"/><ref>{{cite web |title=How racially diverse is the SBC? |url=https://erlc.com/resource/how-racially-diverse-is-the-sbc/ |publisher=] |access-date=2 December 2024 |language=English |date=10 February 2023}}</ref> Since the 1940s, it has spread across the ], with tens of thousands of affiliated churches<ref name=":0" /> and ].<ref>{{Citation | publisher = Encyclopedia | url = http://encyclopedia.com/doc/1O101-SouthernBaptistConvention.html | contribution = Southern Baptist Convention | title = The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions}}.</ref><ref name="aboutus" /><ref name="Reuters1">{{cite news| work = Reuters | title = Fact box: The Southern Baptist Convention | date = June 10, 2008 | url = https://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/idUSN1033434120080610 | access-date =July 6, 2010}}</ref> Beginning in the late 1970s, a ] began to take control of the organization. By the 1990s, this movement had succeeded in taking control of the leadership of the SBC.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Brumbelow |first=David R. |date=2009 |title=Brief History of the SBC Conservative Resurgence |url=http://baptisthistoryhomepage.com/sbc.conser.resurg.html |website=Baptist History Homepage}}</ref> | |||
The SBC is the largest Baptist group, and the largest ] denomination in the United States, claiming 16 million members. According to the ''Religious Congregations Membership Study'', the Convention had 15,922,039 members in 41,514 churches in the United States in 2000. It has 1,200 local associations, 41 state conventions and fellowships covering all 50 states and territories of the United States, and supports thousands of missionaries worldwide (over 10,000 in 2005). There are more Southern Baptist congregations in America than of any other religious group, including the ] (although in terms of members there are three times more Catholics in the United States than Southern Baptists). | |||
Self-reported membership peaked in 2006 at roughly 16 million.<ref name="Executive Committee, Southern Baptist Convention">{{cite web |title=Annual of the 2006 Southern Baptist Convention |url=http://media2.sbhla.org.s3.amazonaws.com/annuals/SBC_Annual_2006.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210610002446/http://media2.sbhla.org.s3.amazonaws.com/annuals/SBC_Annual_2006.pdf |archive-date=2021-06-10 |url-status=live |publisher=Executive Committee, Southern Baptist Convention |access-date=10 June 2021}}</ref> Membership has contracted by an estimated 13.6% since that year, with 2020 marking the 14th year of continuous decline.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Smietana |first1=Bob |title=Southern Baptist decline continues, denomination has lost more than 2 million members since 2006 |url=https://religionnews.com/2021/05/21/southern-baptist-decline-continues-denomination-has-lost-more-than-2-million-members-since-2006/ |access-date=10 June 2021 |work=Religion News Service |agency=Religion News Service |date=2021-05-21}}</ref> Mean organization-wide weekly attendance dropped about 27% between 2006 and 2020.<ref name="Executive Committee, Southern Baptist Convention" /><ref>{{cite news |last1=Howe |first1=Jonathan |title=Southern Baptists grow in number of churches, plant 588 new congregations amid COVID-19 pandemic – Baptist Press |url=https://www.baptistpress.com/resource-library/news/southern-baptists-grow-in-number-of-churches-plant-588-new-congregations-amidst-covid-19-pandemic/ |access-date=10 June 2021 |work=www.baptistpress.com/ |date=May 20, 2021}}</ref> The denomination reported increased participation and a slowing of the rate of overall membership decline for the year 2023. For the same year, it reported nearly 13 million members.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Smietana |first=Bob |date=2024-05-07 |title=Southern Baptists, losing members, find solace in baptisms and better attendance |url=https://religionnews.com/2024/05/07/southern-baptists-drop-below-13-million-but-more-show-up-in-church-or-get-baptized/ |access-date=2024-05-08 |website=Religion News Service |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Shellnutt |first=Kate |date=2024-05-07 |title=SBC Membership Falls to 47-Year Low, But Church Involvement Is Up |url=https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2024/may/southern-baptist-church-decline-sbc-annual-church-profile.html |access-date=2024-05-08 |website=News & Reporting |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Klett |first=Leah MarieAnn |title=Annual church profile reveals Southern Baptist's resurgence in baptisms, worship: 'Reasons to celebrate' |url=https://www.christianpost.com/news/sbc-baptisms-near-pre-pandemic-levels-as-attendance-surges.html |work=The Christian Post}}</ref> | |||
The SBC has congregations in every state and territory in America, though its greatest numbers are in the ], where in the past they exerted considerable influence (to this day, some southern states have little or no legalized gambling, and many southern state counties or portions thereof prohibit alcohol sales, due in part to SBC influence). (As a result of their national scope, in 2005 a proposal was made to change the name from the regional-sounding "Southern Baptist Convention" to a more national-sounding "North American Baptist Convention"; however, the measure was defeated by messengers.) | |||
== Name == | |||
Data from church sources and independent surveys indicate that since 1990, membership of SBC churches is declining as a proportion of the American population. | |||
The official name is the ''Southern Baptist Convention''. The word ''Southern'' in "Southern Baptist Convention" stems from its 1845 organization in ], by white Baptists in the ] who supported ] and ] the ] (known today as the ]), who did not support funding evangelists engaging in slavery in the Southern United States.<ref name="Southern Baptist Theological Seminary-2018">{{cite web|url=http://www.sbts.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Racism-and-the-Legacy-of-Slavery-Report-v4.pdf#page=6 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181220194550/http://www.sbts.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Racism-and-the-Legacy-of-Slavery-Report-v4.pdf |archive-date=2018-12-20 |url-status=live|title=Report on Slavery and Racism in the History of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary|publisher=Southern Baptist Theological Seminary|date=December 2018|access-date=July 29, 2019}}</ref> | |||
In 2012, the organization adopted the descriptor ''Great Commission Baptists'' after the election of its first ] president.<ref name="Foust-2012" /> Additionally, in 2020, some leaders of the Southern Baptists wanted to change its name to "Great Commission Baptists" to distance itself from its white supremacist foundation, and because it is no longer a specifically Southern church. Several churches affiliated with the denomination have also begun to identify as "Great Commission Baptists".<ref name="name change" /><ref>{{Cite news |title=Prominent Southern Baptists are dropping 'Southern' name amid racial unrest |language=en-US |newspaper=The Washington Post |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2020/09/15/southern-baptist-name-great-commission-baptist/ |access-date=2023-03-11 |issn=0190-8286|author-first1=Sarah|author-last1=Pulliam Bailey}}</ref><ref name="CBN News-2020">{{Cite web |date=2020-09-17 |title='Great Commission Baptists': New Signs that Southern Baptists Are Gearing Up for a Big Name Change |url=https://www1.cbn.com/cbnnews/cwn/2020/september/great-commission-baptists-new-signs-that-southern-baptists-are-gearing-up-for-a-big-name-change |access-date=2023-03-11 |website=CBN News |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Banks-2020">{{Cite web |last=Banks |first=Adelle M. |date=2020-09-16 |title=Southern Baptists warm to alternate moniker 'Great Commission Baptists' |url=https://religionnews.com/2020/09/16/southern-baptists-warm-to-moniker-great-commission-baptists/ |access-date=2023-03-11 |website=Religion News Service |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
Because Baptist churches believe strongly in the autonomy of the local church, the SBC is a cooperative organization by which churches can pool resources, rather than as a body with any administrative control over local churches (see SBC Organization below). It maintains a central administrative organization based in ], which has no authority over its affiliated state conventions, local associations, or individual churches or members. Its "confession of faith", the ] (2000 edition), is also not binding on churches or members (see "SBC Beliefs" below). | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
{{Further |Baptists in the United States}} | |||
===Colonial era=== | |||
Baptists arrived in the ] near the end of the 17th century. The first Baptist church in the south was formed in ] under the leadership of William Screven, a Baptist preacher and shipbuilder who arrived there from Maine in 1696. But the zealous evangelism of the ]s was the chief instrument of spreading the Baptist denomination throughout the southern U. S. The first associations formed in the South were the Charleston Association (org. 1751) and the Sandy Creek Association (org. 1758). Baptists in the South participated in forming the first national Baptist organization in 1814 - the ''General Missionary Convention of the Baptist Denomination in the United States of America for Foreign Missions'' (better known as the '']'' or the ''Triennial Convention''; it met every three years). | |||
] in ]]] | |||
Most early Baptists in the British colonies came from England in the 17th century, after conflict with the ] for their dissenting religious views.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Origins of the Particular Baptists|url=https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/themelios/article/origins-of-the-particular-baptists/|access-date=2020-07-21|website=The Gospel Coalition|language=en-US|author-last1=Belyea|author-first1=Gordon L.}}</ref> In 1638, ] founded the first Baptist church in ] at the ], the first permanent European American settlement also founded by Williams in Rhode Island. The oldest Baptist church in the South, ] of ], was organized in 1682 under the leadership of ].<ref>{{Citation | title = Baptist Pioneers in America | publisher = Mainstream Baptists | url = http://www.mainstreambaptists.org/mbn/pioneers.htm | access-date = 3 Feb 2013}}.</ref> A Baptist church was formed in ] in 1715 through the preaching of ] and another in ] in 1727 through the ministry of ]. | |||
The Baptists adhered to a ]. They operated independently of the state-established ] churches in the Southern United States at a time when states prohibited non-Anglicans from holding political office. By 1740, about eight Baptist churches existed in the colonies of Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, with an estimated 300 to 400 members.<ref name="Southern Baptist Beginnings">{{cite web|url= http://www.baptisthistory.org/sbaptistbeginnings.htm|title= Southern Baptist Beginnings|first= Robert A|last= Baker|publisher= Baptist History & Heritage Society|year= 1979|access-date= 2012-10-28|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20121018074627/http://www.baptisthistory.org/sbaptistbeginnings.htm|archive-date= October 18, 2012}}</ref> New members, both black and white, were converted chiefly by Baptist preachers who traveled throughout the Southern United States during the 18th and 19th centuries, in the eras of the ] and ]s.{{sfn|Taylor|1859|pp=57, 60, 71, 83}} | |||
The '''''Southern Baptist Convention''''' was formed May 8-12, 1845 in ]. Its first president was ] (]-]), who was president of the Triennial Convention in 1841. The immediate, though not only, cause was the controversy over ] between Northerners and Southerners within the Triennial Convention and the Home Mission Society. Though the bodies were theoretically neutral, some Baptists in the South did not believe the assurances of neutrality. They knew several leaders were engaged in abolitionist activity. To test this, Georgia Baptists recommended James E. Reeve, a slaveholder, to the Home Mission Society as a missionary in the South. The Society did not appoint Reeve, presumably not on the basis of his being a slaveholder, but because the Georgia Baptists wished his appointment specifically because he was a slaveholder. Baptists from the South subsequently broke from this organization and formed the new convention. | |||
Black churches were founded in Virginia, South Carolina, and ] before the ]. Some black congregations kept their independence even after whites tried to exercise more authority after ] of 1831.{{Sfn | Raboteau | 2004 |p=178–79}} | |||
Another issue that disturbed the churches in the south was the perception that the ''American Baptist Home Mission Society'' (org. 1832) did not appoint a proportionate number of missionaries to the southern region of the U. S. | |||
===American Revolution period=== | |||
It is also evident that Baptists north and south preferred a different type of denominational organization: the Baptists in the north as a whole preferred a loosely structured society composed of individuals who paid annual dues, with each society usually focused on a single ministry, while the southern churches preferred an organization composed of churches patterned after their associations, with a variety of ministries brought under the direction of one denominational organization. | |||
Before the American Revolution, Baptist and ] evangelicals in the Southern United States promoted the view of the common person's equality before God, which embraced enslaved people and free blacks. They challenged the hierarchies of class and race and urged planters to abolish slavery. They welcomed enslaved people as Baptists and accepted them as preachers.{{sfn|Miller|Smith|1997}} | |||
During this time, there was a sharp division between the austerity of the plain-living Baptists, attracted initially from yeomen and common planters, and the opulence of the Anglican planters—the enslaving elite who controlled local and colonial government in what had become an enslaved society by the late 18th century.{{sfn|Kolchin|1993}} The gentry interpreted Baptist church discipline as political radicalism, but it served to ameliorate disorder. The Baptists intensely monitored each other's moral conduct, watching especially for sexual transgressions, cursing, and excessive drinking; they expelled members who would not reform.{{sfn|Isaac|1974}} | |||
==SBC beliefs== | |||
In Virginia and most southern colonies before the American Revolution, the Church of England was the ] and supported by general taxes, as it was in England. It opposed the rapid spread of Baptists in the Southern United States. Particularly, Virginia prosecuted many Baptist preachers for "disturbing the peace" by preaching without licenses from the Anglican Church. ] and ] defended Baptist preachers before the American Revolution in cases considered significant in the history of religious freedom.<ref>{{Citation | last = Ketcham | first = Ralph L | title = James Madison: A Biography | place = Charlottesville, VA | publisher = University of Virginia Press | orig-date = 1971 | format = paperback | year = 1990 | page = | isbn = 978-0-8139-1265-3 | url = https://archive.org/details/jamesmadisonbiog00ketc/page/57 }}.</ref> In 1779, ] wrote the ], enacted in 1786 by the Virginia General Assembly. Madison later applied his ideas and those of the Virginia document related to religious freedom during the ], when he ensured that delegates incorporated them into the ]. | |||
The general theological perspective of the churches of the ''Southern Baptist Convention'' is represented in the ] (BF&M). The BF&M was first drafted in 1925, then revised significantly in 1963 and again in 2000, with the latter revision being the subject of much controversy. | |||
The struggle for religious tolerance erupted during the American Revolution, as the Baptists worked to disestablish the Anglican churches in the South. The Baptists protested vigorously; the resulting social disorder resulted chiefly from the ruling gentry's disregard for public needs. The vitality of the religious opposition made the conflict between "evangelical" and "gentry" styles bitter.{{sfn|Beeman|1978}} Scholarship suggests that the evangelical movement's strength determined its ability to mobilize power outside the conventional authority structure.{{sfn|Kroll-Smith|1984}} | |||
The BF&M is not considered to be a ] along the lines of historic Christian creeds such as the ]; members are not required to adhere to it nor are churches required to use it as their "Statement of Faith" or "Statement of Doctrine" (though many do in lieu of creating their own Statement). Despite the fact that the BF&M is not a "creed," missionaries who apply to serve through the various SBC missionary agencies must "affirm" that their practices, doctrine, and preaching are consistent with the BF&M; this affirmation has also been the subject of controversy. | |||
===National unification and regional division=== | |||
==SBC organization== | |||
{{Main |Triennial Convention}} | |||
In 1814, leaders such as ] helped Baptists unify nationally under what became known informally as the ] (because it met every three years) based in ]. It allowed them to join their resources to support ] abroad. The ], affiliated with the Triennial Convention, was established in 1832 to support missions in U.S. frontier territories. By the mid-19th century, there were many social, cultural, economic, and political differences among business owners of the North, farmers of the West, and ] of the South. The most divisive conflict was primarily over the issue of slavery and, secondarily, over missions.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/baptistsinameric00arms/page/187|title=The Baptists in America|last1=Armstrong |first1=O. K. |date=1979|publisher=Doubleday|last2=Moore Armstrong |first2=Marjorie |isbn=0-385-14655-8|location=Garden City, N.Y.|oclc=4983547|page=}}</ref> | |||
====Divisions over slavery==== | |||
There are four levels of SBC organization: the local church, the local association, the state convention, and the national convention. | |||
{{see also|Christian views on slavery}} | |||
The issues surrounding slavery dominated the 19th century in the United States.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Baptists in America: A History {{!}} Reviews in History|url=https://reviews.history.ac.uk/review/1940|access-date=2020-07-21|website=reviews.history.ac.uk|language=en}}</ref> This created tension between Baptists in northern and southern U.S. states over the issue of ]. In the two decades after the American Revolution during the ], northern Baptist preachers (as well as the ] and ]) increasingly argued that enslavers must free the people they enslaved.{{Sfn | Heyrman | 1998 | pp = 10–18, 155}} Although most Baptists in the 19th century south were ] farmers and common planters, the Baptists also began to attract major planters among their membership. The southern pastors interpreted the Bible as supporting slavery and encouraged paternalistic practices by enslavers. They preached to enslaved people to accept their places and obey their enslavers and welcomed enslaved people and free blacks as members; whites controlled the churches' leadership and usually segregated church seating.{{Sfn | Heyrman | 1998 | pp = 10–18, 155}} From the early 19th century, many Baptist preachers in the Southern United States also argued in favor of preserving the right of ministers to be enslavers.<ref name= historiographicalstudy>{{Cite journal| last = Shurden | first = Walter B. | title = The origins of the Southern Baptist Convention: a historiographical study | journal = Baptist History and Heritage | volume = 37 | issue = 1 | date = January 1, 2002 | url = http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-94160891.html}}</ref> | |||
] was the most prominent Black American congregation within the Portsmouth Association of the ], preceding the north–south split and formation of Southern Baptists]] | |||
Black congregations were sometimes the largest in their regions. For instance, by 1821, Gillfield Baptist in ], had the largest congregation within the Portsmouth Association. At 441 members, it was more than twice as large as the next-biggest church. Before Nat Turner's Rebellion of 1831, Gillfield had a black preacher. Afterward, the state legislature insisted that white men oversee black congregations. Gillfield could not call a black preacher until after the ] and emancipation.{{Sfn | Raboteau | 2004 | p = 188}} After Turner's rebellion, whites worked to exert more control over black congregations and passed laws requiring white ministers to lead or be present at religious meetings. Many enslaved people evaded these restrictions. | |||
The Triennial Convention and the Home Mission Society adopted a kind of neutrality concerning slavery, neither condoning nor condemning it. During the "Georgia Test Case" of 1844, the ] proposed the appointment of the enslaver ] James E. Reeve as a ]. The ] refused to approve his appointment, recognizing the case as a challenge and not wanting to violate their neutrality on slavery. They said that slavery should not be a factor in deliberations about missionary appointments.{{sfn|Early|2008|pp=100–101}} | |||
===The local congregation=== | |||
In 1844, ] president ], a prominent preacher and major planter who enslaved 40 people, drafted the "Alabama Resolutions" and presented them to the Triennial Convention. They included the demand that enslavers be eligible for denominational offices to which the Southern associations contributed financially. They were not adopted. Georgia Baptists decided to test the claimed neutrality by recommending an enslaver to the Home Mission Society as a missionary. The Home Mission Society's board refused to appoint him, noting that missionaries were not allowed to take servants with them (so he clearly could not enslave people) and that they would not make a decision that appeared to endorse slavery. Southern Baptists considered this an infringement of their right to determine candidates.<ref name=Cathcart>{{Citation | url = http://www.wmcarey.edu/carey/staughton/triennial.htm | title = The Baptist Encyclopedia | editor-first = William | editor-last = Cathcart | edition = rev | place = Philadelphia | year = 1883 | publisher = William Carey University | access-date = April 25, 2007 | page = 1077}}.</ref> From the Southern perspective, the Northern position that "slaveholding brethren were less than followers of Jesus" effectively obligated enslavers to leave the fellowship.<ref>{{cite news |first = Dayne |last = Sherman |date = 2012-06-24 |title = Southern Baptist Convention in black, white |url = http://hammondstar.com/articles/2012/06/26/opinion/columnists/8231.txt |archive-url = https://archive.today/20130125090835/http://hammondstar.com/articles/2012/06/26/opinion/columnists/8231.txt |archive-date = 2013-01-25 |newspaper = Sunday Star |location = Hammond, ] |pages = 4A, 5A |access-date = 2012-06-24 }}</ref> This difference came to a head in 1845 when representatives of the northern states refused to appoint missionaries whose families enslaved people. To continue in the work of missions, the southern Baptists separated and created the Southern Baptist Convention.<ref>{{Cite web |title=History |url=https://www.abc-usa.org/what-we-believe/our-history/ |publisher=American Baptist Churches USA}}</ref> | |||
The "lowest" level is the individual congregation. (Though, because the SBC operates on a form of ], the individual congregation may be considered the "highest" level.) | |||
====Missions and organization==== | |||
Each congregation is independent and autonomous, except for certain "mission churches". Thus, it is free to: | |||
] in ]]] | |||
*associate with or disassociate from the SBC (and/or any of its affiliates) at any time, | |||
A secondary issue that disturbed the Southerners was the perception that the American Baptist Home Mission Society did not appoint a proportionate number of missionaries to the South. This was likely a result of the society's not appointing enslavers as missionaries.<ref>{{Citation | first1 = Walter B | last1 = Shurden | first2 = Lori Redwine | last2 = Varnadoe | title = The origins of the Southern Baptist Convention: A historiographical study | journal = Baptist History and Heritage | year = 2002 | volume = 37 | issue = 1 | pages = 71–96}}.</ref> Baptists in the North preferred a loosely structured society of individuals who paid annual dues, with each society usually focused on a single ministry.{{Sfn | McBeth | 1987}}{{Page needed | date = December 2013}} | |||
*determine the level of support which it provides to SBC-affiliated programs and/or other groups, and | |||
*conduct its own internal affairs (such as hiring and firing, determining its doctrinal statement and membership qualifications, order and format of services, and other matters) without "direction" from a higher level entity. | |||
Baptists in Southern churches preferred a more centralized organization of churches patterned after their associations, with a variety of ministries brought under the direction of one denominational organization.{{Sfn | McBeth | 1987 | p = 505}} The increasing tensions and the discontent of Baptists from the Southern United States over national criticism of slavery and issues over missions led to their withdrawal from national Baptist organizations.<ref name="Southern Baptist Beginnings" /> | |||
Certain smaller congregations, called "mission churches", are operated by a larger parent church. One or more parent churches may sponsor the mission church, along with assistance from a local association. The goal is for the mission church to become self-supporting, and thus become an independent and autonomous church. A mission church is typically either a church in a new real estate development, or a church which may be devoted to reaching a certain ethnic group. | |||
The Southern Baptists met at the ] in May 1845.<ref>{{Citation | url = http://www.christianindex.org/1128.article | title = First Baptist Church building landmark restoration | publisher = Christian index | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131211171614/http://www.christianindex.org/1128.article | archive-date = December 11, 2013 }}.</ref> At this meeting, they created a new convention—the Southern Baptist Convention. They elected ] (1782–1862) as its first president. He had served as president of the Triennial Convention in 1841,<ref>{{Cite web |title=William Bullein Johnson |url=https://sbhla.org/biographies/william-bullein-johnson/ |access-date=2023-03-11 |website=Southern Baptist Historical Library & Archives |language=en-US}}</ref> though he initially attempted to avoid a schism. | |||
===The local association=== | |||
===Formation and separation of black Baptists=== | |||
Individual congregations may then choose to affiliate into associations, which are generally organized within certain defined geographic areas within a state (such as a county). The prior general rule was that only one association existed in a specific geographical area, did not cross state lines (unless a state convention consisted of multiple states), and did not accept churches from outside that area; however, with the SBC/CBF division in recent years there may be two or more associations serving an area, and some churches have aligned with out-of-state associations, though the general rule applies in most cases. | |||
] in ]]] | |||
]s had gathered in ] early on, in 1774 in ],{{Sfn | Raboteau | 2004 | p = 137}} and in ], in 1788.<ref name="Love">{{cite news| first= Emanuel King |last=Love|url = http://docsouth.unc.edu/church/love/menu.html |title=History of the First African Baptist Church, from its Organization, January 20th, 1788, to July 1st, 1888. Including the Centennial Celebration, Addresses, Sermons, etc.|publisher= The Morning News Print|year= 1888| access-date= 2006-12-08}}</ref> Some established churches after 1800 on the frontier, such as the ] of ]. In 1824, the Elkhorn Association of Kentucky, which was white-dominated, accepted it. By 1850, First African had 1,820 members, the largest of any Baptist church in the state, black or white.<ref name=Nutter>{{Citation | url = http://baptisthistoryhomepage.com/ky.fayette.fbc.black.lex.html | first = HE | last = Nutter | title = A Brief History of the First Baptist Church (Black) Lexington, Kentucky | year = 1940 | access-date = Aug 22, 2010}}.</ref> In 1861, it had 2,223 members.<ref name=Spencer>{{Citation | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=DXzZAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA657 | first = John H | last = Spencer | title = A History of Kentucky Baptists: From 1769–1885 | volume = II | place = Cincinnati, OH | publisher = JR Baumes | year = 1886 | page = 657 | access-date = Aug 23, 2010}}.</ref> | |||
], ], constructed 1856]] | |||
Southern whites generally required black churches to have white ministers and trustees. In churches with mixed congregations, seating was segregated, with blacks out of sight, often in a balcony. White preaching often emphasized Biblical stipulations that enslaved people should accept their places and try to behave well toward their enslavers. After the ], another split occurred when most ] set up independent ], regional associations, and state and national conventions. Black people wanted to practice Christianity independently of white supervision.{{sfnm |1a1=Brooks |1y=1922 |2a1=Raboteau |2y=2004}} They interpreted the Bible as offering hope for deliverance and saw their exodus out of enslavement as comparable to ],{{sfn|Raboteau|2004}} with abolitionist ] as their ].<ref>{{cite book | |||
|pages=5–7 | |||
|title=A Voice from Harper's Ferry. A Narrative of Events at Harper's Ferry; with incidents prior and subsequent to its capture by John Brown and his men | |||
|first=Osborne Perry | |||
|last=Anderson | |||
|author-link=Osborne Perry Anderson | |||
|location=Boston | |||
|year=1861 | |||
|publisher=Published by the author | |||
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sUxp11UMkBMC | |||
}}</ref> They quickly left white-dominated churches and associations and set up separate state Baptist conventions.<ref name="docsouth.unc.edu" />{{sfn|Brooks|1922}} In 1866, black Baptists of the Southern and Western United States combined to form the Consolidated American Baptist Convention.{{sfn|Brooks|1922}} In 1895, they merged three national conventions to create the ]<ref name="docsouth.unc.edu" />{{sfn|Brooks|1922}} With more than eight million members, it is today the largest African American religious organization and second in size to the Southern Baptists. | |||
Free black people in the North founded churches and denominations in the early 19th century independent of white-dominated organizations. In the ], missionaries, both black and white, from several northern denominations worked in the South; they quickly attracted tens and hundreds of thousands of new members from among the millions of ]. The ] attracted more new members than any other denomination.<ref name="docsouth.unc.edu">{{Cite web |title=The Church in the Southern Black Community: Introduction |url=https://docsouth.unc.edu/church/intro.html |access-date=2023-03-11 |website=University of North Carolina}}</ref> White Southern Baptist churches lost black members to the new denominations, as well as to independent congregations which freedmen organized. | |||
The primary goal of associations is evangelism and church planting (i.e., assisting churches in starting "mission churches"), though some local ministries may be supported by the association (such as a food pantry or ]). | |||
During the ], many Southern Baptist pastors and members of their congregations rejected ] and accepted ], further alienating African Americans.<ref name="The Southern Baptists 2012">{{Cite news |date=17 March 2021 |title=Luter's turn |url=https://www.economist.com/united-states/2012/03/17/luters-turn |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181220192651/https://www.economist.com/united-states/2012/03/17/luters-turn |archive-date=20 December 2018 |access-date=30 June 2024 |newspaper=]}}</ref> According to historian and former Southern Baptist ], "The church was the last bastion of segregation."<ref>{{cite news|title=Social change and the Southern Baptists|url=https://www.economist.com/news/united-states/21676796-bittersweet-tale-prejudice-overcome-and-enduring-deep-south-love-sinner|access-date=25 October 2015|newspaper=]|date=24 October 2015}}</ref> SBC did not integrate seminary classrooms until 1951.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.npr.org/2018/12/13/676333342/southern-baptist-seminary-confronts-history-of-slaveholding-and-deep-racism|title=Southern Baptist Seminary Confronts History Of Slaveholding And 'Deep Racism'|first=Tom|last=Gjelten|publisher=NPR|date=December 13, 2018|access-date=January 5, 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2017/08/02/im-a-black-pastor-heres-why-im-staying-in-the-southern-baptist-convention/|title=I'm a black pastor. Here's why I'm staying in the Southern Baptist Convention| first=William Dwight Sr. | last=McKissic |newspaper=Washington Post|date=2 August 2017|access-date=5 January 2021}}</ref> | |||
Associations cannot direct the affairs of associated churches, but can set requirements for association, and can "disfellowship" any church with which it disagrees, generally in areas of contentious practice (such as a local church promoting ] doctrine – a major issue in the 1970's – or, more common today among conservative associations, a local church promoting ordination of women or support for ]). | |||
In 1995, the convention voted to adopt a resolution in which it renounced its racist roots and apologized for its past defense of ], ], and ].<ref name="Southern Baptist Convention">{{cite web |title=Resolution on racial reconciliation on the 150th anniversary of the Southern Baptist Convention |url=http://www.sbc.net/resolutions/899 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140408064550/http://www.sbc.net/resolutions/899 |archive-date=April 8, 2014 |access-date=April 8, 2014 |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention}}</ref>{{sfnm |1a1=Priest |1a2=Priest |1y=2007 |1p=275 |2a1=Priest |2a2=Nieves |2y=2007 |2p=339}} This marked the denomination's first formal acknowledgment that racism had played a profound role in both its early and modern history. | |||
Association meetings are generally held annually. The association is free to set the time and place, as well as determining the number of messengers each church may send (each church is allowed a minimum number; the general practice – at the association level and at the higher levels as well – is that larger and more financially supportive churches are allowed more messengers). | |||
] meets with the leadership of the Southern Baptist Convention in 2006 in the ] at the ]. Pictured with the President are ], left, ] and his wife Dayle Page.]] | |||
===The state convention=== | |||
===Increasing diversity and policy changes=== | |||
Individual congregations and associations may further choose to affiliate into state conventions. | |||
] was the first African American president of the Southern Baptists]] | |||
By the early 21st century, the number of ethnically diverse congregations was increasing among the Southern Baptists. In 2008, almost 20% of the congregations were majority African American, Asian, Hispanic, or Latino. SBC cooperating churches had an estimated one million African American members.<ref name="Salmon2008">{{Citation | url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/15/AR2008021503772.html | last = Salmon | first = Jacqueline L | title = Southern Baptists Diversifying to Survive: Minority Outreach Seen as Key to Crisis | newspaper = The ] | date = Feb 15, 2008}}.</ref> It has passed a series of resolutions recommending including more black members and appointing more African American leaders.<ref name="The Southern Baptists 2012" /> At its 2012 annual meeting, it elected Pastor ] of the ] as its first African American president. He had earned respect by showing leadership skills in building a large congregation in New Orleans.<ref>{{Citation | url = http://www.nola.com/news/index.ssf/2012/06/fred_luter_jr_of_new_orleans_e.html | last = Pope | first = John | title = The Rev. Fred Luter Jr. of New Orleans elected first black president of Southern Baptist Convention | newspaper = ] | date = June 19, 2012}}.</ref> | |||
The SBC's increasingly national scope inspired some members to suggest a name change. In 2005, some members made proposals at the SBC Annual Meeting to change the name to the more national-sounding "North American Baptist Convention" or "Scriptural Baptist Convention" (to retain the SBC initials). These proposals were defeated.<ref>{{Citation | title = Annual meeting | url = http://www.sbcannualmeeting.net/sbc99/min615ev.htm | publisher = Southern Baptist Convention | contribution = Tuesday Evening | date = June 15, 1999 | access-date = August 3, 2007 | archive-date = May 6, 2009 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090506235234/http://www.sbcannualmeeting.net/sbc99/min615ev.htm }}.</ref> | |||
With the exception of Texas and Virginia, which have two conventions, each state has only one convention (some smaller states, in terms of number of SBC congregations, are affiliated into a larger convention). | |||
The messengers of the 2012 annual meeting in New Orleans voted to adopt the descriptor "Great Commission Baptists". The legal name remained "Southern Baptist Convention", but affiliated churches and convention entities could voluntarily use the descriptor.<ref name="Foust-2012">{{Citation | url = http://bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=38113 | last = Foust | first = Michael | newspaper = News | title = Wrap-up: Historic meeting sees messengers elect 1st black president, approve descriptor | publisher = ] | date = June 21, 2012 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120627032721/http://www.bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=38113 | archive-date = June 27, 2012 }}.</ref> | |||
As with associations, the primary goal is evangelism and church planting; however, the state conventions also support educational institutions and may support retirement and children's homes. | |||
Almost a year after the ], the denomination approved a resolution that called upon member churches and families to stop flying the ].<ref>{{cite web |date=June 14, 2016 |title=Resolution 7: On Sensitivity and Unity Regarding the Confederate Battle Flag |url=http://erlc.com/resource-library/articles/resolution-7-on-sensitivity-and-unity-regarding-the-confederate-battle-flag |website=The Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission}}</ref> | |||
As with associations, the state convention cannot direct individual church affairs but can set requirements for affiliation and "disfellowship" churches at its discretion. And, the state convention generally meets annually, sets the time and place, and determines the number of messengers allowed per church. | |||
The church approved a resolution, "On Refugee Ministry", encouraging member churches and families to welcome refugees coming to the United States.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.christianpost.com/news/southern-baptist-refugee-resettlement-trump-ban-muslim-immigration-165244/|title=Southern Baptists Vote to Support Refugee Resettlement After Trump Says to Ban All Muslim Immigration|date=June 15, 2016}}</ref> In the same convention, ] of the Southern Baptist Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission quickly responded to a pastor who asked why a member should support the right of Muslims living in the U.S. to build mosques. Moore replied, "Sometimes we have to deal with questions that are really complicated... this isn't one of them." Moore said that religious freedom must be for all religions.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npr.org/2016/06/16/482268688/southern-baptists-split-with-trump-on-refugee-resettlement|title=Southern Baptists Split With Donald Trump On Refugee Resettlement|website=NPR|date=June 16, 2016|last1=McCammon|first1=Sarah}}</ref> | |||
===The national convention=== | |||
From February to June 2016, the denomination collaborated with the National Baptist Convention, USA, on racial reconciliation.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Loller |first=Travis |title=Southern Baptists to talk racial unity at annual meeting |url=https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/religion/2016/06/10/southern-baptists-talk-racial-unity/85724250/ |access-date=2023-03-11 |website=The Tennessean |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="Baptist Press-2016">{{Cite web |date=2016-02-12 |title=SBC celebrates racial reconciliation progress |url=https://www.baptistpress.com/resource-library/news/sbc-celebrates-racial-reconciliation-progress/ |access-date=2023-03-11 |website=Baptist Press |language=en-US}}</ref> SBC-GCB and NBC presidents ] and Jerry Young assembled ten pastors from each convention in 2015, discussing race relations; in 2016, '']'' and '']'' revealed tension among National Baptists debating any collaboration with Southern Baptists, quoting NBC President Young:<ref name="Baptist Press-2016" /> | |||
The "highest" level of organization is the national convention (usually called the Convention) made up of individual churches, associations, and state conventions, which meets annually in early June. | |||
{{Blockquote|text=I've never said this to Dr. Floyd, but I've had fellows in my own denomination who called me and said: "What are you doing? I mean, are you not aware of the history?" And I say, obviously I'm aware. They bring up the issue about slavery and that becomes a reason, they say, that we ought not to be involved with the Southern Baptists. Where from my vantage point, that's reverse racism. I do understand the history, and I understand the pain of the past...But what I'm also quite clear about is, if the Gospel does anything at all, the Gospel demands that we not only preach but practice reconciliation.|title=|author=Dr. Jerry Young, NBC USA}} | |||
Article III of the Convention's Constitution states that each church (which it defines as one 1) "in friendly cooperation with the Convention and sympathetic with its purposes and work" – but which ''specifically excludes'' any church supporting ] – and 2) is a ''bona fide'' financial supporter of the Convention during the prior year) is entitled to send one messenger to the Convention, plus one additional messenger for each additional 250 members or $250 in support, but no church can send more than 10 messengers. The messengers must be members of the church they represent. | |||
After an initial resolution denouncing the ] failed to make it to the convention floor, the denomination officially denounced the alt-right movement at the 2017 convention.<ref>{{Citation|title=Southern Baptists denounce white supremacy - CNN Video|date=June 15, 2017 |url=http://www.cnn.com/videos/politics/2017/06/15/southern-baptists-condemn-alt-right-orig-gr.cnn/video/playlists/being-moody-sponsored/|access-date=2017-06-16}}</ref> On November 5, 2017, ] took place at the First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.sbc.net/church/9045-78161/first-baptist-sutherland-springs|title=Southern Baptist Convention > First Baptist Sutherland Springs|website=www.sbc.net|language=en|access-date=2018-01-12|archive-date=January 12, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180112221445/http://www.sbc.net/church/9045-78161/first-baptist-sutherland-springs|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/05/us/texas-church-shooting/index.html|title=At least 26 people killed in shooting at Texas church|author1=Dakin Andone |author2=Kaylee Hartung |author3=Darran Simon|work=CNN|access-date=2018-01-12}}</ref> It was the deadliest shooting to occur at any affiliated church in its history and, in modern history, at an American ].<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.thedailybeast.com/deadliest-church-shooting-in-american-history-strikes-sutherland-springs-texas|title=Deadliest Church Shooting in American History Kills at Least 26|last=Weill|first=Kelly|date=2017-11-05|work=The Daily Beast|access-date=2018-01-12}}</ref> | |||
The Convention is led by a President, who is elected for a one-year term and cannot be elected for more than two consecutive terms (but can serve for more than two terms if not consecutive; only ] has ever done so). | |||
In 2020, the denomination canceled its convention due to ] concerns and eventually rescheduled for June 2021.<ref>{{Cite web|title=2021 SBC Annual Meeting to remain in Nashville, shift venues|url=https://www.baptistpress.com/resource-library/news/2021-sbc-annual-meeting-to-remain-in-nashville-shift-venues/|access-date=2021-04-25|website=www.baptistpress.com/|date=April 15, 2021|publisher=Baptist Press|language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
==SBC leadership== | |||
In a ''Washington Post'' story dated September 15, 2020, Greear said some Southern Baptist Convention leaders wanted to change the official name of the church to "Great Commission Baptists" (GCB), to distance the church from its support of slavery and because it is no longer just a Southern church.<ref name="name change">{{cite news|url=https://greensboro.com/news/national/leaders-may-drop-southern-from-baptist-churches-for-racial-and-regional-inclusion/article_66ea53a8-f84b-11ea-9eff-9f5d723fef04.html|title=Leaders may drop 'Southern' from Baptist churches for racial and regional inclusion|last=Quillin|first=Martha|work=]|date=September 16, 2020|access-date=September 17, 2020}}</ref> Since then, several leaders and churches have begun adopting the alternative descriptor for their churches.<ref name="Banks-2020" /><ref>{{Cite web |last=Blair |first=Leonardo |date=2020-09-15 |title=More So. Baptists embracing alternate 'Great Commission Baptists' name in wake of racial unrest |url=https://www.christianpost.com/news/more-so-baptists-embracing-alternate-great-commission-baptists-name-in-wake-of-racial-unrest.html |access-date=2023-04-25 |website=The Christian Post |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Castronuovo |first=Celine |date=2020-09-15 |title=Southern Baptist Convention leaders dropping 'Southern' from name over slavery connection |url=https://thehill.com/homenews/news/516480-southern-baptist-convention-leaders-dropping-southern-from-name-over-slavery/ |access-date=2023-05-07 |website=The Hill |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
Although the SBC President serves for only one year, and cannot serve for more than two consecutive years, he (the President has always been a male, and given the SBC's conservative leanings probably will continue to be for some time) has the potential to exercise significant influence over the direction of the SBC. | |||
=== Sexual abuse scandal === | |||
The process starts with the appointment by the SBC President of the Committee on Committees, which consists of two members from each "qualified state" (which includes the District of Columbia). The President has the sole authority to nominate the members (unlike other committee members or heads of institutions, the messengers do not approve the Committee on Committees selections). The appointments must be made within 45 days prior to the next Convention session (in other words, near the end of the SBC President's first term). | |||
{{Main|Sexual abuse cases in Southern Baptist churches}} | |||
In 2018, investigations showed that the SBC suppressed reports of ] and protected over 700 accused ministers and church workers.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Fuller |first=Thomas |date=2022-08-13 |title=Southern Baptist Convention Says It Faces Federal Investigation for Sexual Abuse |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/12/us/southern-baptist-convention-sexual-abuse.html |access-date=2022-09-03 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> In 2022, a report indicated church leaders had stonewalled and disparaged clergy sex abuse survivors for nearly two decades;<ref name="David Crary-2022">{{cite web |author1=Bharath, Deepa |author2=Holly Meyer |author3=David Crary |date=May 22, 2022 |title=Report: Top Southern Baptists stonewalled sex abuse victims |url=https://apnews.com/article/baptist-religion-sexual-abuse-by-clergy-southern-convention-bfdbe64389790630488f854c3dae3fd5 |access-date=May 22, 2022 |website=Associated Press}}</ref> reform efforts had been met with criticism or dismissal from other organization leaders;<ref name="Shellnutt-2022">{{Cite news |last=Shellnutt |first=Kate |date=2022-05-22 |title=Southern Baptists Refused to Act on Abuse, Despite Secret List of Pastors |url=https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/may/southern-baptist-abuse-investigation-sbc-ec-legal-survivors.html |access-date=2022-05-26 |work=]}}</ref> and known abusers had been allowed to keep their positions without informing their local churches.<ref name="Sexual Abuse Task Force Team-2022">{{cite web |author=Sexual Abuse Task Force Team |date=May 22, 2022 |title=Guidepost Solutions' Report of the Independent Investigation |url=https://www.sataskforce.net/updates/guidepost-solutions-report-of-the-independent-investigation |access-date=May 22, 2022 |website=SATaskforce.net}}</ref> On August 12, 2022, the denomination announced that it was facing a federal investigation into the scandal.<ref name="NYTimesFedsInv" /> | |||
The Committee on Committees, in turn, nominates the Committee on Nominations, which also consists of two members from each "qualified state". These members are voted on by messengers at the next session (again, near the end of the SBC President's first term); however, nominations to this Committee can be made from the floor. | |||
On February 10, 2019, a joint investigation by the '']'' and the '']'' found that there had been over 700 victims of sexual abuse by nearly 400 Southern Baptist church leaders,<ref name="Chron1">{{cite news |last1=Downen |first1=Robert |last2=Olsen |first2=Lise |last3=Tedesco |first3=John |date=February 10, 2019 |title=20 years, 700 victims: Southern Baptist sexual abuse spreads as leaders resist reforms |url=https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/investigations/article/Southern-Baptist-sexual-abuse-spreads-as-leaders-13588038.php |access-date=February 11, 2019 |work=]}}</ref><ref name="Chron3">{{Cite news |date=2019-06-03 |title=More Abuse of Faith: Southern Baptist churches harbored sex offenders |url=https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Abuse-of-Faith-Southern-Baptist-churches-13912529.php |access-date=2020-07-21 |website=Houston Chronicle |last1=Tedesco |first1=By John }}</ref> pastors, and volunteers over the previous 20 years.<ref>{{Cite news |last1=Phillips |first1=Kristine |last2=Wang |first2=Amy B. |date=February 10, 2019 |title='Pure evil': Southern Baptist leaders condemn decades of sexual abuse revealed in investigation |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2019/02/10/pure-evil-southern-baptist-leaders-condemn-decades-sexual-abuse-revealed-investigation |access-date=March 31, 2019 |newspaper=]}}</ref><ref name="Chron1" /><ref name="Chron3" /> | |||
The Committee on Nominations, in turn, nominates persons to fill vacancies on SBC institutions (a person serving cannot be removed simply due to a change in leadership). Any SBC member may nominate, and be nominated for, any position; the general criteria for approval are 1) the nominee's support of the BF&M and 2) the nominee's church's support for SBC programs. The vacancies are approved at the ''next'' Convention session (in other words, by the end of the SBC President's ''second'' term, provided he is re-elected). | |||
In 2018, the ''Houston Chronicle'' verified details of hundreds of accounts of abuse. It examined federal and state court databases, prison records, and official documents from more than 20 states and researched sex offender registries nationwide.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Downen |first1=Robert |last2=Olsen |first2=Lise |last3=Tedesco |first3=John |date=February 10, 2019 |title=20 years, 700 victims: SBC sexual abuse spreads as leaders resist reforms |url=https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/investigations/article/Southern-Baptist-sexual-abuse-spreads-as-leaders-13588038.php |access-date=February 11, 2019 |work=]}}</ref> The ''Chronicle'' compiled a list of records and information (current as of June 2019)<ref name="Chron3" /><ref name="Chron2">{{Cite web |last1=Olsen |first1=Lise |last2=Downen |first2=Robert |last3=Tedesco |first3=John |last4=Rubio |first4=Jordan |last5=Dempsey |first5=Matt |last6=Lee |first6=Joyce |last7=Gleason |first7=Rachael |title=Abuse of Faith: A Chronicle Investigation |url=https://projects.houstonchronicle.com/2019/southern-baptist-abuse |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190213050334/https://projects.houstonchronicle.com/2019/southern-baptist-abuse/ |archive-date=February 13, 2019 |access-date=March 31, 2019 |website=] |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Chron4">{{Cite web |title=Abuse of Faith: Search our database |url=https://www.houstonchronicle.com/local/investigations/abuse-of-faith/database/ |access-date=2020-07-21 |website=Houston Chronicle |language=en}}</ref> listing church pastors, leaders, employees, and volunteers who have pleaded guilty to or were convicted of sex crimes.<ref name="Chron4" /><ref name="Chron2" /><ref name="Chron3" /> | |||
During this time, the SBC President is appointing the ''next'' Committee on Committees, to begin the process again. | |||
On June 12, 2019, during their annual meeting, convention messengers, who assembled that year in ], approved a resolution condemning sex abuse and establishing a special committee to investigate sex abuse, which will make it easier for the convention to excommunicate churches.<ref name="nprsexabuse">{{Cite news |last1=Neuman |first1=Scott |date=June 12, 2019 |title=Southern Baptists Vote To Hold Churches More Accountable For Mishandling Abuse Claims |url=https://www.npr.org/2019/06/12/731919189/southern-baptists-vote-to-hold-churches-more-accountable-for-mishandling-abuse-c |access-date=2020-07-21 |newspaper=NPR |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Burgess |first=Holly Meyer and Katherine |title=Southern Baptists gathered in Alabama amid a reckoning over sexual abuse. How they addressed the crisis. |url=https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/religion/2019/06/12/southern-baptist-convention-resolutions-sbc-sexual-abuse/1429890001/ |access-date=2020-07-21 |website=The Tennessean |language=en-US}}</ref> The Reverend J. D. Greear, president of the convention and pastor of The Summit Church in Durham, North Carolina, called the move a "defining moment".<ref name="nprsexabuse" /> ], president of the convention's executive committee, echoed Greear's remarks, calling the vote "a very, very significant moment in the history of the Southern Baptist Convention".<ref name="nprsexabuse" /> | |||
As outlined above, the process by which the SBC President can exert influence is a lengthy, complicated, and overlapping one, which takes cooperation from other, like-minded individuals to successfully accomplish, as the results take at least ''three'' years to complete, while the SBC President is limited to two one-year consecutive terms. However, if organized and executed properly, a faction can over time move the SBC in its desired direction. The SBC conservative faction of the late 1970's and 1980's (see "The Conservative/Moderate Controversy" below) used the process to its advantage to move the SBC to its current conservative stance. | |||
In June 2021, letters from former policy director ] to convention leadership were leaked. In the letters, Moore described how the convention had mishandled claims of sexual abuse.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Pulliam Bailey |first1=Sarah |date=June 12, 2021 |title=Secret recordings, leaked letters: Explosive secrets rocking the Southern Baptist Convention |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2021/06/12/southern-baptist-convention-secret-infighting-meeting/ |access-date=June 12, 2021 |newspaper=The Washington Post}}</ref> | |||
==SBC-affiliated organizations== | |||
On May 22, 2022, Guidepost Solutions, an independent firm contracted by the organization's executive committee, released a report detailing that church leaders had stonewalled and disparaged clergy sex abuse survivors for nearly two decades.<ref name="David Crary-2022" /> It was then the most extensive investigation undertaken in the convention's history, with $4 million reportedly spent by the organization to fund the inquiry.<ref name="Shellnutt-2022" /> The report also found that known abusers were allowed to keep their positions without informing their church or congregation.<ref name="Sexual Abuse Task Force Team-2022" /> The report alleged that while the convention had elected a president, J. D. Greear, in 2018 who made addressing sexual abuse a central part of his agenda, nearly all efforts at reform had been met with criticism and dismissal by other organization leaders.<ref name="Shellnutt-2022" /> | |||
The Southern Baptist Convention was organized in 1845 primarily for the purpose of creating a mission board to support the sending of Baptist missionaries. The ], or NAMB, (originally founded as the Domestic Mission Board, and later the Home Mission Board) in ] serves missionaries involved in ] and ] in the U.S. and Canada, while the ], or IMB, (originally the Foreign Mission Board) in Richmond, Virginia sponsors missionaries to the rest of the world. | |||
On June 14, 2022, the denomination voted "to create a way to track pastors and other church workers credibly accused of sex abuse and launch a new task force to oversee further reforms" after a consultant exposed that "Southern Baptist leaders mishandled abuse cases and stonewalled victims for years".<ref>{{Cite web |date=June 15, 2022 |title=Southern Baptist Convention votes to create list of pastors, workers accused of sex abuse |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/southern-baptists-vote-create-list-pastors-workers-accused-sex-abuse-rcna33626 |access-date=2022-07-23 |website=NBC News |language=en}}</ref> The new task force will operate for one year, with the option to continue longer. | |||
The SBC at the national level supports six educational institutions devoted to religious instruction and ministry preparation: | |||
*] in ] (founded in 1859 in Greenville, South Carolina, and the oldest of the six institutions) | |||
*] in ]; | |||
*] in ]; | |||
*] in ]; | |||
*] in ]; and | |||
*] in ]. | |||
On August 12, 2022, the organization announced that it was facing a federal investigation into the sex abuse scandal.<ref name="NYTimesFedsInv">{{Cite web |last=Fuller |first=Thomas |date=August 12, 2022 |title=Southern Baptist Convention Says It Faces Federal Investigation for Sexual Abuse |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/12/us/southern-baptist-convention-sexual-abuse.html |access-date=August 12, 2022 |work=The New York Times}}</ref> As revelations of sexual abuse and lawsuits continued to emerge in 2023,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Southern Baptist Convention settles in abuse case against Paul Pressler, case dismissed |url=https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/religion/2023/12/29/southern-baptist-convention-sbc-settles-abuse-case-against-paul-pressler/71133589007/ |access-date=2024-03-04 |website=The Tennessean |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Graham |first=Ruth |date=2023-11-07 |title=Why Southern Baptists are Furious Over a Sex Abuse Case in Kentucky |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/07/us/baptists-abuse-kentucky.html |access-date=2024-03-04 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Downen |first=Robert |date=2023-12-29 |title=Southern Baptist Convention settles high-profile lawsuit that accused former leader of sexual abuse |url=https://www.texastribune.org/2023/12/29/southern-baptist-convention-sexual-abuse-lawsuit-settlement/ |access-date=2024-03-04 |website=The Texas Tribune |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Gray |first=Jeremy |date=2023-10-26 |title=Church sex abuse survivors 'sickened and saddened' by Southern Baptist Kentucky court filing |url=https://www.al.com/news/2023/10/church-sex-abuse-survivors-sickened-and-saddened-by-southern-baptist-kentucky-court-filing.html |access-date=2024-03-04 |website=al |language=en}}</ref> the SBC's Abuse Reform Implementation Task Force announced continued development of the database of sexual offenders.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Southern Baptist Convention task force says development of sex abuse database continues |url=https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/2023/09/02/southern-baptist-convention-sex-abuse-database-update/70727865007/ |access-date=2024-03-04 |website=The Oklahoman |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Orleans |first=Kate Shellnutt in New |date=2023-06-14 |title=Southern Baptists Committed to Abuse Reform. What Happened? |url=https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2023/june/southern-baptist-abuse-reform-response-task-force-database.html |access-date=2024-03-04 |website=News & Reporting |language=en}}</ref> | |||
Many state conventions also support educational institutions in their states. | |||
==Doctrine== | |||
The SBC also operates ], founded as the Baptist Sunday School Board in 1891, which is one of the largest Christian publishing houses in America and operates the "LifeWay Christian Store" chain of bookstores. | |||
] headquarters in ].]] | |||
The ] (BF&M) represents the general theological perspective of the denomination's churches.<ref name="BFM2000">{{Citation |title=Comparison of 1925, 1963, 2000 versions |url=https://bfm.sbc.net/bfm2000/ |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention}}</ref> The convention first drafted the BF&M in 1925 as a revision of the 1833 ]. The convention revised the BF&M significantly in 1963, amended it in 1998 to add one new section on the family, and revised it again in 2000. The 1998 and 2000 changes were the subject of much controversy, particularly regarding the role of women in the church.<ref name=FeedbackResponse>{{cite web | title = Committee Response to Initial Feedback | publisher = Baptist Faith and Message Study Committee | date = May 26, 2000 | url = http://www.sbc.net/bfm2000/bfmfeedback.asp | access-date = August 2, 2015 | archive-date = August 15, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150815000128/http://www.sbc.net/bfm2000/bfmfeedback.asp | url-status = dead }}</ref> | |||
The BF&M is not a ], such as the ]. Members are not required to adhere to it, and churches and state conventions belonging to the global body are not required to use it as their statement of faith or doctrine, though many do in lieu of creating their own statement.{{Sfn | Hankins | 2002 | pp = 223, 225}} Nevertheless, key leaders, faculty in denomination-owned seminaries, and missionaries who apply to serve through the various missionary agencies must affirm that their practices, doctrine, and preaching are consistent with the BF&M.<ref name=PresMissionaries>{{Citation | contribution-url = http://imb.org/updates/storyview.aspx?StoryID=755 | title = imbConnecting: President asks missionaries to sign BF&M affirmation | contribution = imbConnecting | publisher = SBC | type = position paper | access-date = August 7, 2015 | archive-date = October 27, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20151027042539/http://imb.org/updates/storyview.aspx?StoryID=755 | url-status = dead }}.</ref><ref name="Missionaries Must Decide">{{Citation | contribution-url = http://imb.org/updates/storyview.aspx?StoryID=880 | title = imbConnecting: IMB asking missionaries to decide about BF&M request | contribution = imbConnecting | publisher = SBC | type = position paper | access-date = August 7, 2015 }}{{Dead link|date=November 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}.</ref> | |||
] (founded in 1920 as the Annuity Board of the Southern Baptist Convention) exists to provide insurance, retirement, and investment services to ministers and employees of Southern Baptist churches and agencies. It underwent a severe financial crisis in the 1930s. | |||
In 2012, a ] survey of the denomination's pastors found that 30% of churches identified with the labels ], while 30% identified with the labels ] or ]. LifeWay Research President ] said, "historically, many Baptists have considered themselves neither Calvinist nor Arminian, but holding a unique theological approach not framed well by either category". The survey also found that 60% of its pastors were concerned about Calvinism's impact within the convention.<ref name=CalvinismPoll>{{cite press release| title = SBC Pastors Polled on Calvinism and Its Effect | publisher = LifeWay Research | date = June 19, 2012 | url = http://www.lifewayresearch.com/2012/06/19/sbc-pastors-polled-on-calvinism-and-its-effect/ | access-date = August 2, 2015}}</ref> Nathan Finn writes that the debate over Calvinism has "periodically reignited with increasing intensity" and that non-Calvinists "seem to be especially concerned with the influence of ]" while Calvinists "seem to be particularly concerned with the influence of ] and ]."{{sfn|Finn|2010|p=73}} | |||
], founded in 1888, is an auxiliary to the Southern Baptist Convention, and helps facilitate two large annual missions offerings: the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering and the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering. | |||
Historically, the denomination has not considered ] or other ] to be in accordance with Scriptural teaching, though the BF&M does not mention the subject. In 2015, the ] lifted a ban on glossolalia for its missionaries while reaffirming that it should not be taught as normative.<ref>Greg Horton and Yonat Shimron , , washingtonpost.com, USA, May 14, 2015</ref> | |||
==Prominent Southern Baptists== | |||
*] | |||
*], the pastor of the nearly 16,000-member First Baptist Church of Atlanta | |||
*], the pastor of the 24,000-member ] in ] (Falwell was previously an ] and a long-time critic of the SBC; however, with the conservatives taking control of the SBC, Falwell led his congregation to affiliate with the SBC) | |||
*], the former pastor of the 28,000 member ] in ], who passed away in November 2005 | |||
**], who took over for Rogers at Bellevue Baptist | |||
*], pastor of the 20,000-member ] in California and author of '']'' | |||
*], pastor of Hebron Baptist Church in ], Georgia; former VP of the SBC as well as President of the Georgia Baptist Convention | |||
*], the pastor of the 31,000 member Second Baptist Church in Houston, Texas, and his sons (Ed--pastor of the 20,000 member ] in ], Ben--singles pastor at Second Baptist, and Cliff--lead singer of ]) | |||
*], former pastor of the ], Florida | |||
*], new pastor at First Baptist Jacksonville, formerly pastor at ], Texas | |||
*], pastor of the 25,000 member ] in ]. | |||
*], attends Jack Graham's church and forwarded Jack Graham's book ''A Man of God'' | |||
*], House GOP Whip | |||
*], president of ] | |||
*], president of the SBC's ''Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission'' since 1988 | |||
*], president of ] | |||
*], child actress | |||
*], former ] | |||
*] (he later became involved in the ] movement and no longer considers himself Southern Baptist, even going so far as to surrender his original ordination certificate from a SBC church) | |||
*], president of ]; he has written a book on the Epistles of John, and a forward to ] by ]. | |||
The convention brings together ] and ] churches.<ref>Corrie E. Norman, Donald S. Armentrout, ''Religion in the Contemporary South: Changes, Continuities, and Contexts'', Univ. of Tennessee Press, USA, 2005, p. 80</ref> | |||
==Controversies in SBC history== | |||
===Position statements=== | |||
In addition to the controversy that led to the formation of the SBC, the Convention has suffered several issues that caused loss of churches and/or support, notably: | |||
]]] | |||
In addition to the BF&M, the denomination has also issued position statements affirming the autonomy of the local church;<ref name="autonomy">{{Cite web |title=On Local Church Autonomy And Accountability - SBC.net |url=https://www.sbc.net/resource-library/resolutions/on-local-church-autonomy-and-accountability/ |access-date=2023-03-11 |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |language=en-US}}</ref> identifying the Cooperative Program of missions as integral to the denomination;<ref name="coop">{{Citation |title=About us |type=position paper |access-date=July 19, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080921171129/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pscooperation.asp |contribution=Cooperation |contribution-url=http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pscooperation.asp |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |archive-date=September 21, 2008}}.</ref> that statements of belief are revisable in light of Scripture, though ];<ref name="creed">{{Citation |title=About us |type=position paper |access-date=July 19, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080921171135/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pscreeds.asp |contribution=Creeds |contribution-url=http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pscreeds.asp |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |archive-date=September 21, 2008}}.</ref> honoring the indigenous principle in missions without compromising doctrine or its identity for missional opportunities;<ref name="missions">{{Citation |title=About us |type=position paper |access-date=July 19, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080921171140/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/psmissions.asp |contribution=Missions |contribution-url=http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/psmissions.asp |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |archive-date=September 21, 2008}}.</ref> that laypersons have the same right as ordained ministers to communicate with God, interpret Scripture, and minister in Christ's name;<ref name="priesthood">{{Citation | url = http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pspriesthood.asp | title = Priesthood of all believers | publisher = SBC | type = position paper | access-date = July 19, 2007 | archive-date = September 21, 2008 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080921171145/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pspriesthood.asp }}.</ref> that "At the moment of conception, a new being enters the universe, a human being, a being created in God's image", who as such should be protected regardless of the circumstances of the conception;<ref name="sanctity">{{Citation |title=Sanctity of life |url=http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pssanctity.asp |type=position paper |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061025102901/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pssanctity.asp |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |archive-date=October 25, 2006}}</ref> that God's plan for marriage and sexual intimacy is a lifetime relationship of one man and one woman, rejecting homosexuality; understanding the Bible to forbid any form of extramarital sexual relations;<ref name="sexuality">{{Citation |title=Sexuality |url=http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/positionstatements.asp |type=position paper |access-date=November 7, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200727023904/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/positionstatements.asp |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |archive-date=July 27, 2020}}.</ref> affirming the accountability of each person before God;<ref name="soulcomp">{{Citation |title=Soul Competency |url=http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pssoul.asp |type=position paper |access-date=July 19, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080921114605/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pssoul.asp |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |archive-date=September 21, 2008}}.</ref> and that women are not eligible to serve as pastors.<ref name="women">{{Citation |title=Women in ministry |url=http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pswomen.asp |type=position paper |access-date=July 19, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080921171219/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/pswomen.asp |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |archive-date=September 21, 2008}}.</ref> | |||
In 2022, it passed a resolution against ], which it considers a heretical distortion of the message of the Bible.<ref>{{Cite web |author-first1=Brandon|author-last1=Showalter|date=2022-06-15 |title=So. Baptists denounce prosperity gospel as 'false teaching' in resolution at annual meeting |url=https://www.christianpost.com/news/southern-baptists-denounce-prosperity-gospel-as-false-teaching.html |access-date=2023-03-11 |website=The Christian Post |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
*], which led to the formation of ''Gospel Missions'' and the forming of the ]; | |||
*the "]" (1896-1899); and | |||
* the ]/] controversy, which led to the formation of independent Baptist groups such as the ]. | |||
==== Abortion ==== | |||
The most notable of the controversies in SBC history is the "]/]" controversy of the late 1970's and 1980's, which is reported to be among the very few instances where the more conservative of two factions has managed to gain or maintain control of a mainline denomination. | |||
The position of many Southern Baptists on ] has changed significantly over time, evolving from acceptance under certain circumstances to firm opposition.<ref name="Roach-2015">{{Cite web |last=Roach |first=David |date=January 16, 2015 |title=How Southern Baptists became pro-life |url=https://www.baptistpress.com/resource-library/news/how-southern-baptists-became-pro-life/ |access-date=April 25, 2023 |website=Baptist Press |language=en-US |quote=Three years later, a poll conducted by the Baptist Standard newsjournal found that 90 percent of Texas Baptists believed their state's abortion laws were too restrictive... Support for abortion rights was not limited to theological moderates and liberals. At New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary in the early 1970s, some conservative students who went on to become state convention presidents and pastors of prominent churches supported abortion for reasons other than to save the life of the mother...}}</ref> | |||
In 1971, the SBC passed a resolution urging a loosening of U.S. abortion laws, stating:<ref name="Edsall-2021">{{Cite news |last=Edsall |first=Thomas B. |date=2021-09-15 |title=Abortion Has Never Been Just About Abortion |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/15/opinion/abortion-evangelicals-conservatives.html |access-date=2023-08-06 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331 |quote=In 1978, the hostile reaction to an I.R.S. proposal to impose taxes on churches running segregated private schools ("seg academies" for the children of white Southerners seeking to avoid federally mandated school integration orders) provided the opportunity to mobilize born again and evangelical parishioners through the creation of the Moral Majority. As Stewart argues, Viguerie, Weyrich and others... were determined to find an issue that could bring together a much larger constituency... After long and contentious debate... came to a consensus, Stewart writes: "They landed upon the one surprising word that would supply the key to the political puzzle of the age: 'abortion.'"}}</ref><blockquote>Be it further resolved, that we call upon Southern Baptists to work for legislation that will allow the possibility of abortion under such conditions as rape, incest, clear evidence of severe fetal deformity, and carefully ascertained evidence of the likelihood of damage to the emotional, mental, and physical health of the mother.</blockquote>In 1973, a "poll conducted by the '']'' news journal found that 90 percent of Texas Baptists believed their state's abortion laws were too restrictive".<ref name="Roach-2015"/> | |||
===The "conservative/moderate controversy"=== | |||
During this era, a majority of Southern Baptists, including a few conservatives within the denomination, supported a moderate expansion of ], seeing it as a matter of ], what they saw ] of ], and belief in ].<ref name="Williams-2015">{{Cite journal |last=Williams |first=Daniel K. |date=June 2015 |title=The Partisan Trajectory of the American Pro-Life Movement: How a Liberal Catholic Campaign Became a Conservative Evangelical Cause |journal=Religions |language=en |volume=6 |issue=2 |pages=451–475 |doi=10.3390/rel6020451 |issn=2077-1444 |doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Williams |first=Daniel K. |date=2022-05-09 |title=This Really Is a Different Pro-Life Movement |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/05/south-abortion-pro-life-protestants-catholics/629779/ |access-date=2023-04-06 |website=The Atlantic |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Halpern |first=Sue |date=November 8, 2018 |title=How Republicans Became Anti-Choice |language=en |work=] |url=https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2018/11/08/how-republicans-became-anti-choice/ |access-date=2023-04-14 |issn=0028-7504}}</ref> Southern Baptists' and evangelicals' initial reaction to '']'' decision was one of support or indifference; they overwhelmingly viewed ] as a ] and ] concern. By the mid-1970s, this began to change, as a movement that sought to change Southern Baptists' opinions on abortion began to incline them against it substantially.<ref name="Williams-2015" /><ref name="Roach-2015"/> Over that period, the SBC ] in other ways as well. Today, the SBC strongly opposes abortion.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Southern Baptist Convention |title=Baptist Faith and Message 2000 |url=https://bfm.sbc.net/bfm2000/#xv |website=Southern Baptist Convention}}</ref> | |||
By the late 1970s, two clear factions had emerged in the convention. | |||
==== Gender-based roles ==== | |||
] argued for a less ] interpretation of the ] and were open to adopting changes that reflected those taking place in society as a whole. Amongst other things, moderates took more liberal positions on issues such as ], ], ], and the ] of women. ] opposed these trends, alarmed by them. | |||
Officially, the denomination subscribes to the ] view of ]s.{{sfn|Finn|2010|pp=68–69}} Beginning in the early 1970s, as a reaction to their perceptions of various "women's liberation movements",<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.sbc.net/resolutions/amResolution.asp?ID=1090 |title= Resolution on the Place of Women in Christian Service |publisher= SBC |access-date= December 10, 2011 |archive-date= January 18, 2012 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120118161933/http://www.sbc.net/resolutions/amResolution.asp?ID=1090 |url-status= dead }}</ref> the church, along with several other historically conservative Baptist groups,<ref>See {{harvnb|Morris|Lee|2005|pp=355–363}}, for a discussion of attitudes regarding gender and their relationship to ministry.</ref> began to assert its view of the propriety and primacy of what it deemed "traditional gender roles" as a body. In 1973, at the annual meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention, delegates passed a resolution that read in part: "Man was not made for woman, but the woman for the man. Woman is the glory of man. Woman would not have existed without man."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://feminist.org/resources/feminist-chronicles/the-feminist-chronicles-2/part-ii-1973/|title=Part II - 1973}}</ref> In 1998, the convention appended a male leadership understanding of marriage to the 1963 version of the Baptist Faith and Message, with an official amendment: Article XVIII, "The Family". In 2000, it revised the document to reflect support for a male-only pastorate with no mention of the office of deacon.<ref name="women" /><ref>{{Citation | url = http://www.baptist2baptist.net/b2barticle.asp?ID=228 | first = Tammi Reed | last = Ledbetter | title = SBC and Women Pastors, Comprehensive Report Does Not Sustain Inflated Statistics |date=October 2000 | newspaper = Baptist 2 Baptist | access-date = July 19, 2007}}.</ref> | |||
In 1984, when it had about 250 women pastors, the Convention adopted a resolution affirming the exclusion of women from pastoral leadership.<ref name="upi.com">David E. Anderson, , upi.com, USA, June 15, 1984</ref> | |||
] (a Houston judge) and ] realized that the President's sole authority to nominate the Committee on Committees could, over time, work to turn the Convention back to what they considered its historic roots. Thus, they developed the following strategy: | |||
Since 1987, various local associations and regional conventions have considered churches that have authorized the ] to not be in friendly cooperation (or "disfellowshipped") without the intervention of the national convention on the subject.<ref>David Roach, , baptistpress.com, USA, 20 October 2015</ref> | |||
*Nominate a conservative-minded SBC President, to be approved by what they believed was the "silent majority" of conservative SBC messengers. | |||
*The SBC President would then appoint a conservative-dominated Committee on Committees (this action did not require messenger approval, as stated above). | |||
*The Committee on Committees would then nominate a conservative-dominated Committee on Nominations, to be approved by the conservative majority of messengers at the next meeting. | |||
*The Committee on Nominations would then nominate conservative-minded SBC members whenever an opening was available (the Committee does not have authority to remove someone from a position), again to be approved by the conservative majority of messengers at the second meeting after initial election of the conservative-minded President. | |||
*Repeat the process each year, so that eventually conservative-minded SBC members comprise the majority of leadership in key positions. | |||
By explicitly defining the pastoral office as the exclusive domain of males, the 2000 BF&M provision became the Southern Baptist's first-ever official position against women pastors.<ref>"Comparison of 1925, 1963 and 2000 Baptist Faith and Message". Online: http://www.sbc.net/bfm2000/bfmcomparison.asp {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150812073746/http://www.sbc.net/bfm2000/bfmcomparison.asp |date=August 12, 2015 }}. Accessed: 7 Aug 2015</ref> As individual churches affiliated with the organization are autonomous, churches cannot be forced to adopt a male-only pastorate.<ref name="autonomy" /> | |||
Conservatives succeeded in having conservative supporters elected as SBC President, beginning with the election of ] in 1979. Throughout the 1980s, working within the existing framework and the strategy outlined above, conservatives gained control over the SBC leadership at every level from the administration to key faculty at their seminaries, and slowly reversed the SBC's moderate positions in favor of more conservative viewpoints (for example, on abortion, the SBC reversed course from a moderate "reluctant support" ] stance to a strong conservative ] stance, which it continues to hold today). '''''Every SBC President since 1979 has come from the conservative faction of the SBC.''''' | |||
Some churches that have installed women as their pastors have been disfellowshipped from membership in their local associations; a smaller number have been disfellowshipped from their affiliated state conventions.<ref>{{Citation | first = Kristen | last = Campbell | title = Baptist Church Ousted for Hiring Woman Pastor | newspaper = Religion News Service | url = http://www.beliefnet.com/story/202/story_20231_1.html | access-date = 2007-09-26 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071107170239/http://www.beliefnet.com/story/202/story_20231_1.html | archive-date = November 7, 2007 }}.</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Shellnutt |first=Kate |title=Southern Baptist Convention Disfellowships Saddleback Church |url=https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2023/february/saddleback-church-southern-baptist-sbc-disfellowship-female.html |access-date=2023-03-11 |website=Christianity Today |date=February 21, 2023 |language=en}}</ref> In February 2023, the Executive Committee for the first time deemed five churches that had appointed women pastors to not be in friendly cooperation. In June 2023, when two churches requested a review of the decision, 88% of church representatives at the annual convention voted to uphold the decision.<ref>Michael Gryboski, , christianpost.com, USA, June 14, 2023</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-06-14 |title=Messengers sustain removal of 3 churches not in 'friendly cooperation' - The Baptist Paper |url=https://thebaptistpaper.org/messengers-sustain-removal-of-3-churches-not-in-friendly-cooperation/,%20https://thebaptistpaper.org/messengers-sustain-removal-of-3-churches-not-in-friendly-cooperation/ |access-date=2023-06-14 |website=thebaptistpaper.org |language=en-US}}</ref> ''American Reformer'' magazine estimated the convention would have 1,844 female pastors in 2023.<ref>Kevin McClure, , americanreformer.org, USA, June 10, 2023</ref> | |||
This change in control, termed the "Conservative Resurgence" by supporters and the "Fundamentalist Takeover" by detractors, culminated in the adoption of significant changes to the Baptist Faith and Message at the 2000 SBC Annual Meeting. At this point, the moderates then formed the ] (CBF), organized as a "convention within the convention" to support causes not controlled by the conservative faction. In addition, the ], an independent and unaffiliated group similar in theological viewpoint to the CBF, also formed during this time. | |||
The crystallization of the church's positions on gender roles and restrictions on women's participation in the pastorate contributed to the decision by members now belonging to the ], which broke from the convention in 1991.<ref>{{Citation | first1 = Eileen R | last1 = Campbell-Reed | first2 = Pamela R | last2 = Durso | url = http://www.cbeinternational.org/files/u1/resources/14-Campbell-pdf.pdf | title = Assessing Attitudes About Women in Baptist Life | year = 2006 | publisher = CBE international | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101229121648/http://www.cbeinternational.org/files/u1/resources/14-Campbell-pdf.pdf | archive-date = December 29, 2010 }}.</ref> Another denomination that broke off, the ], also accepts women's ordination. | |||
The majority of state conventions sided with the SBC. However, the state conventions in Texas and Virginia sided with the CBF, which resulted in the formation of conservative, SBC-affiliated state conventions in these states. Of the two state conventions deciding to align with the CBF, the most notable involved the ] (BGCT), the largest of the Southern Baptist state conventions. BGCT voted in 1998 to align with the CBF, stating as its reasons for doing so were its objections to proposed changes in the 2000 revision of the ''Message'', which it stated made the document sound like a "creed", in violation of historic Baptist tradition which opposed the use of creeds. In a reversal from the national convention (where the moderates left and the conservatives stayed), many Texas conservatives formed their own state convention, the ] Convention, and either disassociated completely from BGCT or sought "dual alignment" with both groups. | |||
The 2000 BF&M prescribes a husband-headship authority structure, closely following the ]'s exhortations in {{Bibleverse |Ephesians|5:21–33}}:<ref>{{Cite web |title=Southern Baptist Convention > Commentary on Article XVIII – The Family |url=http://www.sbc.net/bfm2000/articleXVIII.asp |access-date=2018-12-25 |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |archive-date=December 25, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181225230210/http://www.sbc.net/bfm2000/articleXVIII.asp |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|'''Article XVIII. 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. She, being in the image of God as is her husband and thus equal to him, has the God-given responsibility to respect her husband and to serve as his helper in managing the household and nurturing the next generation.}} | |||
===Ordinances=== | |||
] | |||
Southern/Great Commission Baptists observe two ]: the ] and ] (also known as ''credo''-baptism, from the ] for "I believe").<ref name="Reuters1" /><ref name="BFM2000" /> Furthermore, they hold the historic Baptist belief that ] is the only valid mode of baptism.<ref name="Reuters1" /> The Baptist Faith and Message describes baptism as a symbolic act of obedience and a testimony of the believer's faith in ] to other people. The BF&M also notes that baptism is a precondition to congregational church membership.<ref name="BFM2000" /> | |||
The BF&M holds to ],<ref name="memorial">{{cite web|url=http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/basicbeliefs.asp|title=Basic Beliefs: Baptism & the Lord's Supper|year=2018|publisher=Southern Baptist Convention|access-date=9 August 2019|quote=The Lord's Supper is a symbolic act of obedience whereby members memorialize the death of the Redeemer and anticipate His Second Coming.|archive-date=March 12, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130312082918/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/basicbeliefs.asp}}</ref> the belief that the Lord's Supper is a symbolic act of obedience in which believers commemorate the ] and look forward to his ].<ref name="BFM2000"/><ref name="memorial"/> Individual churches are free to practice either ] or ] (due to the convention's belief in congregational polity and the autonomy of the local church), but most practice open communion. For the same reason, the frequency of observance of the Lord's Supper varies from church to church. Churches commonly observe it quarterly, but some churches offer it monthly; a small minority offer it weekly.<ref name=Communionsurvey>{{cite press release| title = LifeWay Surveys Lord's Supper Practices of SBC Churches | publisher = LifeWay Research | date = September 17, 2012 | url = http://www.lifewayresearch.com/2012/09/17/lifeway-surveys-lords-supper-practices-of-sbc-churches/ | access-date = August 2, 2015}}</ref> Because the organization has traditionally opposed alcoholic beverage consumption by members, ] is used instead of wine.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2012-01-10 |title=Why We Don't Use Alcohol For the Lord's Supper at our Church by David R. Brumbelow |url=https://sbcvoices.com/why-we-dont-use-alcohol-for-the-lords-supper-by-david-r-brumbelow/ |access-date=2023-05-06 |website=SBC Voices |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
=== Worship === | |||
] at Grace Baptist Church in ], affiliated to the convention, 2016]] | |||
] of ] worship service.]] | |||
Most members observe a ] form of ], which is less formal and uses no stated ]. The form of the worship services generally depends on whether the congregation uses a traditional or a contemporary service, or a mix of both—the main differences concerning music and the response to the sermon. | |||
In both types of services, there will be a prayer at the opening of the service, before the sermon, and at closing. Offerings are taken, which may be around the middle of the service or at the end (with the increased popularity of electronic financial systems, some churches operate kiosks allowing givers the opportunity to do so online or through a phone app or website link). Responsive Scripture readings are uncommon but may be done on a special occasion.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Shoemaker |first=Stephen |date=2013-04-11 |title=An Overview of Worship in the Southern Baptist Convention |url=https://www.worshiplibrary.com/blog/an-overview-of-worship-in-the-southern-baptist-convention/ |url-status=usurped |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221128081853/https://www.worshiplibrary.com/blog/an-overview-of-worship-in-the-southern-baptist-convention/ |archive-date=2022-11-28 |access-date=2023-05-06 |website=WorshipLibrary |language=en}}</ref> | |||
In a traditional service, the music typically features hymns accompanied by a piano or organ (churches have generally phased out the latter due to a shift in worship preferences) and sometimes with a special featured soloist or choir. Smaller churches typically let anyone participate in the choir regardless of actual singing ability; larger churches will limit participation to those who have successfully tried out for a role. After the sermon, an invitation to respond (sometimes termed an ]) might be given; people may respond during the invitation by receiving ] as Lord and Savior and beginning Christian discipleship, seeking baptism or requesting to join the congregation, or entering into vocational ministry or making some other publicly stated decision.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2011-04-04 |title=A theological perspective on the 'invitation/altar call' |url=https://www.baptistmessenger.com/a-theological-perspective-on-the-%e2%80%98invitationaltar-call%e2%80%99/ |access-date=2023-03-11 |website=Baptist Messenger of Oklahoma |language=en-US}}</ref> Churches may schedule baptisms on specific weekends, or (especially in buildings with built-in baptisteries) be readily available for anyone desiring baptism. | |||
In a contemporary service, the music generally features modern songs led by a praise team or similarly named group with featured singers. Choirs are not as common. An altar call may or may not be given at the end; if not, interested persons are directed to seek out people in the lobby who can address any questions. Baptismal services are usually scheduled as specific and special events. Also, church membership is usually done periodically by attending specific classes about the church's history, beliefs, what it seeks to accomplish, and what is expected of a prospective member. Controversially, churches may ask a member to sign a "membership covenant", a document with the prospective member's promise to perform certain tasks (regular church attendance at main services and small groups, regular giving—sometimes even requiring tithing, and service within the church). Such covenants are highly controversial: among other things, such a covenant may not permit a member to withdraw from membership to avoid church discipline voluntarily, or, in some cases, the member cannot leave at all (even when not under discipline) without the approval of church leadership.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Church Membership Covenants – Legal Contracts that are NOT Biblical!|website= ]|url=http://thewartburgwatch.com/permpage-church-membership-covenants-legal-contracts-that-are-not-biblical/|access-date=2020-07-22|date=April 19, 2017 |language=en-US}}</ref> A Dallas/Fort Worth church was forced to apologize to a member who attempted to do so for failing to request permission to annul her marriage after her husband admitted to viewing child pornography.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2015/may-web-only/matt-chandler-apologizes-for-village-churchs-decision-to-di.html|title=Former Member Accepts Acts 29 Megachurch Apology in Church Discipline Case|first=Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra, Morgan Lee, and Bob|last=Smietana|website=ChristianityToday.com|date=June 10, 2015 |access-date=February 11, 2019}}</ref> | |||
==Statistics== | |||
===Membership=== | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:auto auto auto auto; font-size:95%; float:right;" | |||
|- | |||
! Year !! Membership | |||
|- | |||
| 1845 || Align=right | 350,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 1860 || Align=right | 650,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 1875 || Align=right | 1,260,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 1890 || Align=right | 1,240,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 1905 || Align=right | 1,900,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 1920 || Align=right | 3,150,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 1935 || Align=right | 4,480,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 1950 || Align=right | 7,080,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 1965 || Align=right | 10,780,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 1980 || Align=right | 13,700,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 1995 || Align=right | 15,400,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 2000 || Align=right | 15,900,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 2005 || Align=right | 16,600,000 | |||
|- | |||
| 2006 || Align=right | 16,306,246 | |||
|- | |||
| 2007 || Align=right | 16,266,920 | |||
|- | |||
| 2008 || Align=right | 16,228,438 | |||
|- | |||
| 2009 || Align=right | 16,160,088 | |||
|- | |||
| 2010 || Align=right | 16,136,044 | |||
|- | |||
| 2011 || Align=right | 15,978,112 | |||
|- | |||
| 2012 || Align=right | 15,872,404 | |||
|- | |||
| 2013 || Align=right | 15,735,640 | |||
|- | |||
| 2014 || Align=right | 15,499,173 | |||
|- | |||
| 2015 || Align=right | 15,294,764 | |||
|- | |||
| 2016 || Align=right | 15,216,978 | |||
|- | |||
| 2017 || Align=right | 15,005,638 | |||
|- | |||
| 2018 || Align=right | 14,813,234 | |||
|- | |||
| 2019 || Align=right | 14,525,579 | |||
|- | |||
| 2020 || Align=right | 14,089,947 | |||
|- | |||
| 2021 || Align=right | 13,680,493 | |||
|- | |||
| 2022 || Align=right | 13,223,122 | |||
|- | |||
| 2023 || Align=right | 12,982,090 | |||
|- | |||
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" |<ref>{{cite web |title=2020 Southern Baptist Convention Statistical Summary |url=http://blog.lifeway.com/newsroom/files/2021/05/ACP_Summary_2020.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210525211309/http://blog.lifeway.com/newsroom/files/2021/05/ACP_Summary_2020.pdf |archive-date=2021-05-25 |url-status=live |website=blog.lifeway.com |publisher=Lifeway Research |access-date=10 June 2021}}</ref><ref name="Pipes-2016">{{cite news |last=Pipes |first=Carol |date=June 7, 2016 |title=ACP: More churches reported; baptisms decline |url=http://www.bpnews.net/46989/acp-more-churches-reported-baptism-worship-numbers-decline |work=Baptist Press |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |access-date=June 28, 2016}}</ref><ref name="acp2009">{{Citation | url = http://www.bpnews.net/pdf/2009SBCStatsSummary.pdf | title = Southern Baptist Convention Statistical Summary – 2009 | access-date = 2011-02-13 | newspaper = BP news | archive-date = April 12, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150412133650/http://www.bpnews.net/pdf/2009SBCStatsSummary.pdf }}.</ref><ref name="lifeway.com">{{Citation | url = http://www.lifeway.com/Article/news-sbc-baptisms-churches-increased-in-2011-membership-declined | title = SBC Baptisms and Churches Increased in 2011, Membership Declined: 2011 ACP | publisher = Lifeway | access-date = 2013-08-09 | archive-date = October 16, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20151016174435/http://www.lifeway.com/Article/news-sbc-baptisms-churches-increased-in-2011-membership-declined }}.</ref><ref>{{Citation | title = Historical Statistics of the US | year = 1976 | series = H805}} (with 2005 estimate from Convention figures).</ref><ref name="2014n">{{Citation | url = http://www.bpnews.net/44914/sbc-reports-more-churches-fewer-people | title = SBC reports more churches, fewer people | access-date = 2015-06-21 | newspaper = ]| date = June 10, 2015 }}.</ref><ref>{{Citation | date = 2008-04-24 | url = http://www.ajc.com/news/content/news/stories/2008/04/24/southernbaptists_0424.html | title = Southern Baptist numbers, baptisms drop | publisher = AJC | access-date = July 7, 2008 | archive-date = January 4, 2009 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090104205317/http://www.ajc.com/news/content/news/stories/2008/04/24/southernbaptists_0424.html }}.</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.wordandway.org/news/baptists/item/3752-report-southern-baptist-churches-up-in-2016-baptisms-membership-decline|title=Report: Southern Baptist Churches up in 2016; Baptisms, Membership Decline|first=Carol|last=Pipes|access-date=2017-06-12|language=en-gb|archive-date=June 13, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170613204915/http://wordandway.org/news/baptists/item/3752-report-southern-baptist-churches-up-in-2016-baptisms-membership-decline|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bpnews.net/51000/acp-worship-attendance-rises-baptisms-decline|title=ACP: Worship attendance rises, baptisms decline|date=June 2018 |publisher=Baptist Press|access-date=26 June 2018}}</ref><ref name="bpnews.net">{{cite web|url=http://www.bpnews.net/52962/acp--giving-increases-baptisms-attendance-continue-decline|title=SBC: Giving increases while baptisms continue decline|date=May 23, 2019 |publisher=Baptist Press|access-date=24 May 2019}}</ref><ref name="Baptist Press">{{cite web|url=http://www.bpnews.net/54903/southern-baptist-convention-continues-statistical-decline-floyd-calls-for-rethinking-acp-process|title=Southern Baptist Convention continues statistical decline, Floyd calls for rethinking ACP process|date=June 4, 2020 |publisher=Baptist Press|access-date=8 June 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Pipes|first=Carol|title=Southern Baptists see baptisms, giving rebound in 2021|url=https://www.baptistpress.com/resource-library/news/southern-baptists-see-baptisms-giving-rebound-in-2021/|publisher=]|date=May 12, 2022|access-date=June 8, 2022}}</ref><ref>Aaron Earls, , baptistpress.com, USA, May 9, 2023</ref> | |||
|} | |||
According to a 2024 census published by the convention, the organization claimed 46,906 churches, 4,050,668 weekly worshippers, and 12,982,090 members.<ref>Southern Baptist Convention, , sbc.net, USA, retrieved May 5, 2024</ref> | |||
The global convention has more than 1,161 local associations, 41 state conventions, and fellowships covering all 50 states and territories of the United States.<ref>Southern Baptist Convention, , sbc.net, USA, retrieved June 8, 2021</ref> The five U.S. states with the highest rates of membership are Texas, Georgia, North Carolina, Florida, and Tennessee. Texas has the largest number of members, with an estimated 2.75 million.<ref>{{Citation | url = http://lwnewsroom.s3.amazonaws.com/newsroom/files/2014/05/ACP2013-states.jpg | title = SBC Statistics By State Convention - 2013 | publisher = Lifeway | access-date = 2014-08-28}}.</ref> Within Texas, these are divided among the more traditionalist ] and more moderate, diversified ]; the Baptist General Convention of Texas, or the Texas Baptists, are also more financially and organizationally autonomous from the primary convention in contrast to most state conventions. | |||
Southern/Great Commission Baptists support thousands of missionaries in the United States and worldwide through the Cooperative Program. | |||
===Trends=== | |||
Data from church sources and independent surveys indicate that since 1990 membership of Southern Baptist churches has declined as a proportion of the American population.<ref>{{Citation | publisher = Namb | url = http://www.namb.net/atf/cf/{CDA250E8–8866–4236–9A0C-C646DE153446}/RCS_Comparison_1990_2000.pdf | title = RCS comparison 1990–2000 }}.</ref> Historically, the convention grew throughout its history until 2007, when membership decreased by a net figure of nearly 40,000 members.<ref>{{Citation|date=2008-04-30 |title=Baptists 4 ethics |url=http://www.baptists4ethics.com/BB_PDFS/BB_apr30_2008.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081028202326/http://www.baptists4ethics.com/BB_PDFS/BB_apr30_2008.pdf |archive-date=October 28, 2008 }}</ref> The total membership, of about 16.2 million, was flat over the same period, falling by 38,482 or 0.2%. An important indicator of the denomination's health is new baptisms, which have decreased yearly for seven of the last eight years. {{As of |2008}}, they had reached their lowest levels since 1987.<ref>{{Citation | url = http://www.lifeway.com/lwc/article_main_page/0,1703,A%3D167523&M%3D201280,00.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080430142012/http://www.lifeway.com/lwc/article_main_page/0,1703,A%3D167523%26M%3D201280,00.html | archive-date = 2008-04-30 | title = Life way}}</ref> Membership continued to decline from 2008 to 2012.<ref name="Harris">{{Cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/southern-baptists-elect-a-black-leader-and-raise-hopes-for-increased-diversity/2012/06/21/gJQANl4FwV_story.html|title=Southern Baptists Elect a Black Leader and Raise Hopes for Increased Diversity|last1=Harris|first1=Hamil|date=June 22, 2012|newspaper=]|access-date=June 25, 2012|last2=Hunter|first2=Jeannine}}</ref> The convention's statistical summary of 2014 recorded a loss of 236,467 members, their biggest one-year decline since 1881.<ref name="2014n"/> In 2018, membership fell below 15 million for the first time since 1989 and reached its lowest level for over 30 years.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2019/may/southern-baptists-acp-membership-baptism-decline-2018.html|title=Southern Baptists Down to Lowest in 30 Years|date=May 23, 2019 |publisher=Chrisrianity Today|access-date=24 May 2019}}</ref> | |||
This decline in membership and baptisms has prompted some SBC researchers to describe the convention as a "denomination in decline".<ref>{{cite web | date = April 23, 2008 | url = http://blogs.lifeway.com/blog/edstetzer/2008/04/the_end_of_the_beginning_1.html | title = Breaking News | author = Ed Stetzer | type = blog | publisher = Life way | access-date = December 10, 2011 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100113011056/http://blogs.lifeway.com/blog/edstetzer/2008/04/the_end_of_the_beginning_1.html | archive-date = January 13, 2010 }}</ref> In 2008, former SBC president ] suggested that if current conditions continue, half of all the convention's churches will close their doors permanently by 2030.<ref name="Christian index">{{cite web |url= http://www.christianindex.org/4421.article |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20081012043807/http://www.christianindex.org/4421.article |archive-date= October 12, 2008 |title= Have Southern Baptists joined the evangelical decline? |publisher= Christian index |access-date= December 10, 2011 }}</ref> A 2004 survey of SBC churches supported that assessment, finding that the membership of 70% of SBC churches is declining or has plateaued.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?ID=19542 | publisher = Baptist Press | title = Study updates stats on health of Southern Baptist churches – News with a Christian Perspective | work = News | date = November 15, 2004 | access-date = December 10, 2011 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110615030235/http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?ID=19542 | archive-date = June 15, 2011 }}</ref> | |||
The decline in membership was discussed at the June 2008 Annual Convention.<ref>{{Citation|url=http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/religion/stories/DN-relSBC_07met.ART.West.Edition1.467b548.html |title=Dallas news |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100828103024/http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/religion/stories/DN-relSBC_07met.ART.West.Edition1.467b548.html |archive-date=August 28, 2010 }}</ref> Curt Watke, a former researcher for the organization, noted four reasons for the decline of the church based on his research: the increase in immigration by non-European groups, decline in growth among predominantly European American (white) churches, the aging of the current membership, and a decrease in the proportion of younger generations participating in any church life.<ref name="Christian index" /> Some believe Baptists have not worked sufficiently to attract minorities.<ref name="LovanDylan">{{Citation | last = Lovan | first = Dylan T | title = Southern Baptists to gather in Kentucky | publisher = The Associated Press | date = June 19, 2009}}.</ref> | |||
On the other hand, the state conventions of ] and ] report an increasing proportion of minority members.<ref name="LovanDylan" /> In 1990, 5% of congregations were non-white. In 2012, the proportion of congregations of other ethnic groups (African American, Latino, and Asian) had increased to 20%.<ref name="The Southern Baptists 2012" /> Sixty percent of the minority congregations were in Texas, particularly in the suburbs of ] and ].<ref name="The Southern Baptists 2012" /> In 2020, an estimated 22.3% of affiliated churches were non-white.<ref>{{Cite web |title=How racially diverse is the SBC? |url=https://erlc.com/resource-library/articles/how-racially-diverse-is-the-sbc/ |access-date=2023-05-10 |website=ERLC|date=February 10, 2023 }}</ref> | |||
The decline in SBC-GCB membership may be more pronounced than these statistics indicate because Baptist churches are not required to remove inactive members from their rolls, likely leading to greatly inflated membership numbers. In addition, hundreds of large, moderate congregations have shifted their primary allegiance to other Baptist groups, such as the ], the ], or the ], but have continued to remain on the convention's books. Their members are thus counted in the convention's totals, although these churches no longer participate in the annual convention meetings or make more than the minimum financial contributions.<ref name=fewerbaptists>{{Cite news| last = McMullen | first =Cary | title =Any way you count it, fewer Southern Baptists | newspaper = Palatka Daily News | date = June 17, 1999 | url = http://www.adherents.com/largecom/baptist_fewerSBC.html| archive-url = https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20090521224629/http://www.adherents.com/largecom/baptist_fewerSBC.html| url-status = usurped| archive-date = May 21, 2009| access-date = August 31, 2009}}</ref> | |||
Groups have sometimes withdrawn from the convention because of its conservative trends. On November 6, 2000, the Baptist General Convention of Texas voted to cut its contributions to Southern Baptist seminaries and reallocate more than $5 million to three theological seminaries that members believed were more moderate.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://assets.baptiststandard.com/archived/2000/11_6/pages/funding.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140826120451/http://assets.baptiststandard.com/archived/2000/11_6/pages/funding.html|archive-date=2014-08-26|title=Texas Baptists affirm change in funding SBC}}</ref> These included the Hispanic Baptist Theological School in San Antonio, Baylor University's ] in Waco, and ]'s Logsdon School of Theology in Abilene. Since the controversies of the 1980s, the convention has established more than 20 theological or divinity programs directed toward moderate and progressive Baptists in the Southeastern United States. In addition to Texas, the convention established schools in Virginia, Georgia, North Carolina, and Alabama in the 1990s. These include the Baptist Theological Seminary in Richmond, McAfee School of Theology of Mercer University in ], ], Gardner Webb and Campbell Divinity schools in North Carolina, and Beeson Divinity School at ]. These schools contributed to the flat and declining enrollment at seminaries operating in the same region of the United States. Texas and Virginia have the largest state conventions identified as moderate in theological approach.<ref>{{Citation | url = http://www.dallasnews.com/religion/203483_baptists_31met.html | first = Jeffrey | last = Weiss | title = Moderate Baptists cut conservative seminaries' funds; Action signals their continued discontent with leadership of the nation's largest Protestant denomination | newspaper = Dallas Morning News | date = 31 October 2000 | access-date = 25 June 2012}}.</ref> | |||
On June 4, 2020, the organization reported a drop in membership—the 13th consecutive year that membership declined. Total membership in the church fell almost 2% to 14,525,579 from 2018 to 2019.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Southern Baptist Convention continues statistical decline, Floyd calls for rethinking ACP process|url=http://www.bpnews.net/54903/southern-baptist-convention-continues-statistical-decline-floyd-calls-for-rethinking-acp-process|access-date=2020-07-21|website=Baptist Press|date=June 4, 2020 |language=en}}</ref> In 2022, the church lost another 457,371 members (the largest drop in over a century) to 13,223,122, a similar level as the late 1970s.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Smietana |first1=Bob |title=Southern Baptists lost nearly half a million members in 2022 |url=https://religionnews.com/2023/05/09/southern-baptist-convention-declined-by-nearly-half-a-million-members-in-2022/ |access-date=23 October 2023 |work=Religion News Service |date=9 May 2023}}</ref> | |||
==Organization== | |||
]]]{{Main |List of state and other conventions associated with the Southern Baptist Convention}}The denomination has four levels of organization: the local congregation, the local association, the state convention, and the national convention. There are 41 affiliated state conventions or fellowships.<ref name="aboutus">{{cite web|url=http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/|title=About Us: Meet the Southern Baptists|publisher=Southern Baptist Convention|access-date=August 25, 2010|archive-date=August 3, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200803103313/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/}}</ref> | |||
The national and state conventions and local associations are cooperative associations by which churches can voluntarily pool resources<ref>SBC membership does not prohibit a church from also supporting missionaries directly or also supporting other ]s such as ].</ref> to support missionary and other work. Because of the basic Baptist principle of the autonomy of the local church and the ] polity of the denomination,<ref name="autonomy" /> neither the national convention nor the state conventions or local associations has any administrative or ecclesiastical control over local churches; such a group may disfellowship a local congregation over an issue, but may not terminate its leadership or members or force its closure. The national convention has no authority over state conventions or local associations, nor do state conventions have authority over local associations. Furthermore, no individual congregation has any authority over any other congregation; a church may oversee another congregation voluntarily as a mission work, but another congregation has the right to become an independent congregation at any time. | |||
{{blockquote|'''Article IV. Authority:''' While independent and sovereign in its own sphere, the Convention does not claim and will never attempt to exercise any authority over any other Baptist body, whether church, auxiliary organizations, associations, or convention.<ref>{{Citation | url = http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/legal/constitution.asp | title = About Us | publisher = SBC | contribution = Constitution}}.</ref>}} | |||
The national convention maintains a central administrative organization in ]. Its executive committee exercises authority and control over seminaries and other institutions owned by the national convention. | |||
The national convention had around 10,000 ethnic churches as of 2008.<ref>{{cite news|last=Allen|first=Sheila|title=Ethnic churches: Japanese church members live out faith, change lives|url=http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=29587|access-date=November 12, 2011|newspaper=]|date=December 31, 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110510234908/http://www.bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=29587|archive-date=May 10, 2011}}</ref> Commitment to the autonomy of local churches was the primary force behind its executive committee's rejection of a proposal to create a convention-wide database of clergy accused of sexual crimes against congregants or other minors in order to stop the "recurring tide"<ref>{{cite magazine| url= http://www.time.com/time/specials/2008/top10/article/0,30583,1855948_1861760_1862212,00.html | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20081211071322/http://www.time.com/time/specials/2008/top10/article/0,30583,1855948_1861760_1862212,00.html | archive-date= December 11, 2008 | magazine=Time | title=The Top 10 Everything of 2008 | date = November 3, 2008 | access-date=May 23, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite news | last = Ulrich | first = Elizabeth | date = 2008-06-19 | url = http://www.nashvillescene.com/2008-06-19/news/save-yourselves/ | title = Save Yourselves | type = feature | newspaper = Nashville Scene | access-date = December 10, 2011 | archive-date = October 12, 2008 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081012162645/http://www.nashvillescene.com/2008-06-19/news/save-yourselves/ }}</ref> of clergy sexual abuse within affiliated congregations. A 2009 study by Lifeway Christian Resources, the convention's research and publishing arm, revealed that one in eight background checks for potential volunteer or church workers revealed a history of crime that could have prevented them from working.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.lifeway.com/article/?id=169449 | archive-url = https://archive.today/20120906221752/http://www.lifeway.com/article/?id=169449 | url-status = dead | archive-date = September 6, 2012 | title = Background checks help churches protect children | publisher = Lifeway | access-date = December 10, 2011 }}</ref> | |||
The denominational statement of faith, the Baptist Faith and Message,<ref name="BFM2000" /> is not binding on churches or members due to the autonomy of the local church (though national convention employees and missionaries must agree to its views as a condition of employment or missionary support).<ref name=autonomy/> Politically and culturally, Southern/Great Commission Baptists tend to be conservative. Most oppose homosexual activity and abortion.<ref name="Reuters1" /> | |||
===Pastor and deacon=== | |||
Generally, Baptists recognize only two scriptural offices: pastor-teacher and ]. The convention passed a resolution in the early 1980s officially restricting offices requiring ordination to men. According to the Baptist Faith and Message, the office of ''pastor'' is limited to men based on ] scriptures.<ref name="aboutus-faq9">{{Citation |title=FAQs – Frequently Asked Questions |url=http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/faqs.asp#9 |contribution=Can women be pastors or deacons in the SBC? |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |access-date=July 19, 2009 |archive-date=July 22, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090722184856/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/faqs.asp#9 |url-status=dead }}.</ref> | |||
===Annual meeting=== | |||
] addressing the SBC in Atlanta in 1978 (in 2000, Carter broke with the SBC over its position on the status of women).<ref>{{cite web |title=Jimmy Carter Leaves Southern Baptists |url=https://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=95311&page=1 |website=ABC News |access-date=3 September 2023 |language=en}}</ref>]] | |||
The annual meeting (held in June over two days) consists of delegates (called "messengers") from cooperating churches. The messengers confer, determine the convention's programs, policies, and budget, and elect the officers and committees. Each cooperating church is allowed up to two messengers regardless of the amount given to convention entities and may have more depending on the amount of contributions (in dollars or percent of the church's budget), but the maximum number of messengers permitted from any church is 12. | |||
==Missions and affiliated organizations== | |||
===Cooperative Program=== | |||
The Cooperative Program (CP) is the organization's unified funds collection and distribution program for the support of regional, national, and international ministries; contributions from affiliated congregations fund the CP.<ref name="CP1">{{cite web |title=What is the Cooperative Program? |url=http://www.cpmissions.net/2003/what%20is%20cp.asp |access-date=March 21, 2010 |publisher=Southern Baptist Convention |archive-date=February 25, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140225094418/http://www.cpmissions.net/2003/what%20is%20cp.asp |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
In the fiscal year ending September 30, 2008, the local congregations of the denomination reported gift receipts of $11.1 billion.<ref name="2009AR-CP">{{cite book |title=Annual of the 2009 Southern Baptist Convention | publisher = Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention |date=June 2009| pages=109–11| url = http://sbcec.org/bor/2009/2009SBCAnnual.pdf |access-date= March 21, 2010 }}</ref> From this they sent $548 million, approximately five percent, to their state Baptist conventions through the CP.<ref name="2009AR-CP" /> Of this amount, the state Baptist conventions retained $344 million for their work. State conventions sent $204 million to the national CP budget to support denomination-wide ministries.<ref name="2009AR-CP" /> | |||
===Mission agencies=== | |||
The denomination was organized in 1845 to create a mission board to support the sending of Baptist missionaries. The ], or NAMB, (founded as the Domestic Mission Board, and later the Home Mission Board) in ] serves missionaries involved in ] and ] in the U.S. and Canada, while the ], or IMB, (originally the Foreign Mission Board) in ], sponsors missionaries to the rest of the world. | |||
Baptist Men is the mission organization for men in the convention's churches and is under the North American Mission Board. | |||
The ], founded in 1888, is an auxiliary to the national convention, which helps facilitate two large annual missions offerings: the ] Easter Offering (for North American missions) and the ] Christmas Offering (for international missions). | |||
===Southern Baptist Disaster Relief=== | |||
], September 12, 2005]] | |||
Among the more visible organizations within the North American Mission Board is Southern Baptist Disaster Relief. In 1967, a small group of Texas Southern Baptist volunteers helped victims of ] by serving hot food cooked on small "buddy burners". In 2005, volunteers responded to 166 named disasters, prepared 17,124,738 meals, repaired 7,246 homes, and removed debris from 13,986 yards.<ref>{{Citation | title = CBADR | url = http://cbadr.net/index.cfm/pageid/NewsE68324/articleaction/view/articleid/NAMBF58765/ | access-date = 2010-03-20 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131105130803/http://cbadr.net/index.cfm/pageid/NewsE68324/articleaction/view/articleid/NAMBF58765/ | archive-date = November 5, 2013 }}.</ref> Southern Baptist Disaster Relief provides many different types: food, water, child care, communication, showers, laundry, repairs, rebuilding, or other essential tangible items that contribute to the resumption of life following the crisis—and the message of the Gospel. All assistance is provided to individuals and communities free of charge. SBC DR volunteer kitchens prepare much of the food distributed by the Red Cross in major disasters.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.redcross.org/images/pdfs/Katrina_OneYearReport.pdf | publisher = Red cross | title = Katrina One Year Report | access-date = December 10, 2011 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120121200321/http://www.redcross.org/images/pdfs/Katrina_OneYearReport.pdf | archive-date = January 21, 2012 }}</ref> | |||
===Southern Baptist Association of Christian Schools=== | |||
The SBC has various primary and secondary schools affiliated with the Southern Baptist Association of Christian Schools.<ref>Southern Baptist Association of Christian Schools, , nacschools.org, USA, retrieved October 22, 2022</ref> | |||
===Universities and colleges=== | |||
{{main |List of universities and colleges affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention}} | |||
] in ], affiliated with the convention through the ]]] | |||
The SBC has several affiliated universities.<ref>Southern Baptist Convention, , sbc.net, USA, retrieved October 22, 2022</ref> | |||
===Seminaries=== | |||
]'s chapel]] | |||
The national convention directly supports six theological seminaries devoted to ministry preparation.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/entities/seminaries.asp | title = Southern Baptist Theological Seminaries | website = www.sbc.net | access-date = June 27, 2016 | archive-date = May 13, 2016 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160513064317/http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/entities/seminaries.asp | url-status = dead }}</ref> | |||
* ], ] (1859, originally in Greenville, South Carolina) | |||
* ], ] (1908, originally part of Baylor University in Waco, Texas). | |||
* ], ] (1916, originally New Orleans Baptist Bible Institute) | |||
* ], ] (1944, initially in Oakland, California, and formerly called Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary) | |||
* ], ] (1950) | |||
* ], ] (1957) | |||
===Other organizations=== | |||
Other notable organizations under the national convention include '']'', the nation's largest Christian news service, established by the convention in 1946; ], the college-level organization operating campus and international missions typically known as the Baptist Student Union and Baptist Collegiate Ministries;<ref>{{Cite web |date=2019-03-21 |title=Home - College Ministry |url=https://collegeministry.com/ |access-date=2023-03-11 |website=collegeministry.com |language=en-US}}</ref> GuideStone Financial Resources (formerly called the Annuity Board of the Southern Baptist Convention, and founded in 1918 as the Relief Board of the Southern Baptist Convention), which provides insurance, retirement, and investment services to churches, ministers, and employees of affiliated churches and agencies (it does not limit its services to member churches and members); ], founded as the Baptist Sunday School Board in 1891, one of the nation's largest Christian publishing houses, which previously operated the "LifeWay Christian Stores" (formerly "Baptist Book Stores") until closing physical stores in 2019; ] (formerly known as the Christian Life Commission of the SBC), dedicated to addressing social and moral concerns and their implications on public policy issues from city hall to Congress and the courts; and the Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives, in Nashville, Tennessee, the official depository for the denomination's archives and a research center for the study of Baptists worldwide. The SBHLA website includes digital resources.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sbhla.org/|title=Southern Baptist Historical Library & Archive - Baptist history, Baptist Archives, church records, church history|website=www.sbhla.org|access-date=February 11, 2019}}</ref> | |||
==Controversies== | |||
From its establishment to the present day, the organization has experienced several periods of major internal controversy. | |||
===Landmark controversy=== | |||
In the 1850s–1860s, a group of young activists called for a return to certain early practices, or what they called ]. Other leaders disagreed with their assertions, and the Baptist congregations became split on the issues. Eventually, the disagreements led to the formation of Gospel Missions and the ] (1924), as well as many unaffiliated independent churches. One historian called the related James Robinson Graves—Robert Boyte Crawford Howell controversy (1858–60) the greatest to affect the denomination before that of the late 20th century involving the fundamentalist-moderate break.{{sfn|Tull|2000|p=85}} | |||
===Whitsitt controversy=== | |||
In the Whitsitt controversy of 1896–99,{{Sfn | McBeth | 1987 | pp = 446–58}} William H. Whitsitt, a professor at ], suggested that contrary to earlier thought, English Baptists did not begin to baptize by ] until 1641, when some ]s, as they were then called, began to practice immersion. This went against the idea of immersion, which was the practice of the earliest Baptists, as some Landmarkists contended. | |||
===American Civil War === | |||
{{further|Southern Baptist Convention#Increasing diversity and policy changes}} | |||
During the 19th and most of the 20th century, the organization, reflecting Southern attitudes toward politics, supported ], ], the ], and the ].<ref name="Todd2022">{{cite journal |last1=Todd |first1=Obbie Tyler |title=Southern Yankees |volume=47|issue=1|journal=Themelios |year=2022|language=English |quote=In many ways, the Baptist denomination became a reflection of the peaks and valleys of the American people in the 1800s. Baptists thus provide an excellent window into the national identity during the antebellum period.}}</ref><ref name="Newman-2001">{{Cite book |last=Newman |first=Mark |title=Getting Right With God: Southern Baptists and Desegregation, 1945-1995 |publisher=] |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-8173-1060-8 |pages=IX of preface}}</ref> The organization also denounced ] as an "abomination", falsely citing ].<ref name="Newman-2001" /> Beginning in the late 1970s, a ] began to take control of the organization. By the 1990s, this movement succeeded in taking control of the SBC leadership. In 1995, it officially denounced racism and its white supremacist history.<ref name="Southern Baptist Convention" /> In the 21st century, after the election of its first black president, the SBC adopted the "Great Commission Baptists" descriptor, which gained prominent use among several churches that wished to sever themselves from its white supremacist history and controversies.<ref name="CBN News-2020" /><ref name="Banks-2020" /> By 2008, almost 20% of SBC congregations were majority African American, Asian, Hispanic, or Latino, reflecting the denomination's increased racial diversity. SBC-cooperating churches had an estimated one million African American members.<ref name="Salmon2008">{{Citation | url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/15/AR2008021503772.html | last = Salmon | first = Jacqueline L | title = Southern Baptists Diversifying to Survive: Minority Outreach Seen as Key to Crisis | newspaper = The ] | date = Feb 15, 2008}}.</ref> By 2018, the denomination had passed resolutions that recommended gaining more black members and appointing more African American leaders.<ref name="The Southern Baptists 2012" /> | |||
===Moderates–conservatives controversy=== | |||
] | |||
The ] ({{circa|1970–2000}}) was an intense struggle for control of the national convention's resources and ideological direction.{{Sfn | McBeth | 1987 | pp = 681ff}} | |||
In July 1961, Professor Ralph Elliott at ] in ] published ''The Message of Genesis'', a book rejecting ].<ref>Pauline J. Chang, , christianpost.com, USA, March 31, 2004</ref> In the 1970s, other convention seminary professors came under suspicion of ]. | |||
In response to these events, a group of pastors led by Judge ] and Pastor ] campaigned at conferences in churches for a more conservative direction in Convention policies.<ref>Frances FitzGerald, ''The Evangelicals: The Struggle to Shape America'', Simon and Schuster, USA, 2017, p. 264</ref> This group's candidate, ], was elected Convention president at the 1979 annual meeting. After the election, the organization's new leaders replaced all Southern Baptist agency leaders with people who said they were more conservative. Its initiators called it a "]", while its moderate opponents called it a "] takeover".{{sfn|James|Jackson|Shepherd|Showalter|2006}} | |||
], president of the ] from 1978 to 1994,{{sfn|McBeth|1987}}<ref>{{cite news |last=Steinfels |first=Peter |author-link=Peter Steinfels |date=March 11, 1994 |title=Baptists Dismiss Seminary Head In Surprise Move |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1994/03/11/us/baptists-dismiss-seminary-head-in-surprise-move.html |newspaper=] |access-date=October 15, 2016}}</ref> said the resurgence fragmented Southern Baptist fellowship and was "far more serious than ",{{sfn|Dilday|2007|p=2}} calling it as "a self-destructive, contentious, one-sided feud that at times took on combative characteristics".{{sfn|Dilday|2007|p=2}} Since 1979, Southern Baptists had become polarized into two major groups: moderates and conservatives. Reflecting the conservative majority votes of messengers at the 1979 annual meeting of the SBC, the new national organization officers replaced all leaders of Southern Baptist agencies with presumably more conservative people (often dubbed "fundamentalist" by dissenters).{{efn|The era of conservative resurgence was accompanied by the erosion of more-liberal members (see, e.g., ]).}}{{sfn|Humphreys|2002}} | |||
In 1984, this group was heavily involved in passing a resolution excluding women from pastoral leadership.<ref name="upi.com"/> | |||
In 1987, a group of churches criticized the fundamentalists for controlling the leadership and founded the ].<ref>William H. Brackney, ''Historical Dictionary of the Baptists'', Rowman & Littlefield, USA, 2021, p. 14</ref> A group of moderate churches criticized the denomination for the same reasons, as well as opposition to ], and founded the ] in 1991.<ref>William H. Brackney, ''Historical Dictionary of the Baptists'', Rowman & Littlefield, USA, 2021, p. 169</ref><ref>Richard Leigh Walker, , christianitytoday.com, USA, June 24, 1991</ref> | |||
In 2019, after the scandals of sexual abuse accusations involving the deacon ] and sexual abuse cover-ups involving former president ], the ] removed the stained-glass windows from the MacGorman Chapel opened in 2011 depicting them as actors of a "conservative resurgence".<ref>Bob Allen, , baptistnews.com, USA, April 12, 2019</ref> | |||
=== LGBTQ === | |||
Since 1992, the national convention has "disfellowshipped" various churches that support LGBTQ inclusion.<ref name="Yawn">{{Cite web |last=Yawn |first=Andrew J. |title=A Georgia church, removed from the SBC for allowing gay members, wants to make sure 'everybody's welcome' |url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/04/04/southern-baptist-convention-georgia-church-accepts-gay-members/4840775001/ |access-date=2023-03-11 |website=USA TODAY |language=en-US}}</ref> In 2018, the ] was disfellowshipped for this reason.<ref>{{cite news | last = Roach | first = David | title = SBC Ends Relationship with DC Convention| newspaper = ] | publisher = Southern Baptist Convention | date = May 22, 2018 | url = http://bpnews.net/50939/sbc-ends-relationship-with-dc-convention | access-date = May 28, 2018 }}</ref> | |||
=== Critical race theory === | |||
By November 2020, the six convention seminary presidents called ] "unbiblical". They emphasized the importance of not turning to secular ideas to confront racism.<ref>Michael Gryboski, , christianpost.com, USA, December 01, 2020</ref> Four African American churches left the SBC over the leadership's charged statement on the issue.<ref>{{Cite news |title=Several Black pastors break with the Southern Baptist Convention over a statement on race |language=en-US |newspaper=] |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2020/12/23/black-pastors-break-southern-baptist-critical-race-theory/ |access-date=2023-05-06 |issn=0190-8286}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{Portal|United States|Evangelical Christianity|}} | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/02/17/AR2006021701978_pf.html | |||
* ] | |||
*http://en.wikipedia.org/Southern_Baptist_Convention_of_the_Deaf | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Notes== | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
=== |
===Footnotes=== | ||
{{Reflist |30em}} | |||
*Baker, Robert. ed. ''A Baptist Source Book''. Nashville, Tenn.: Broadman Press, 1966. | |||
* Religious Congregations & Membership in the United States, 2000. Glenmary Research Center | |||
=== |
===Bibliography=== | ||
{{refbegin|35em|indent=yes}} | |||
* ''Encyclopedia of Southern Baptists: Presenting Their History, Doctrine, Polity, Life, Leadership, Organization & Work'' Knoxville: Broadman Press, v 1-2 (1958), 1500 pp; 2 supplementary volumes 1958 and 1962; vol 5 = Index, 1984 | |||
* {{cite journal | |||
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* Baker, Robert. ''The Southern Baptist Convention and Its People, 1607-1972''. Nashville, Tenn.: Broadman Press, 1974. | |||
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* Barnes, William. The Southern Baptist Convention, 1845-1953. Nashville, Tenn.: Broadman Press, 1954. | |||
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* Eighmy, John. ''Churches in Cultural Captivity: A History of the Social Attitudes of Southern Baptists''. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1972. | |||
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*Arthur Emery Farnsley II, ''Southern Baptist Politics: Authority and Power in the Restructuring of an American Denomination''; Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994 | |||
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* {{cite book | |||
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* {{cite book | |||
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|title=The Great Commission Resurgence: Fulfilling God's Mandate in Our Time | |||
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* {{cite book | |||
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|year=1991 | |||
|title=The Truth in Crisis. Volume 6: The Conservative Resurgence in the Southern Baptist Convention | |||
|location=Hannibal, Missouri | |||
|publisher=Hannibal Books | |||
|isbn=978-0-929292-19-9 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
|last=Heyrman | |||
|first=Christine Leigh | |||
|year=1998 | |||
|title=Southern Cross: The Beginning of the Bible Belt | |||
|location=Chapel Hill, North Carolina | |||
|publisher=University of North Carolina Press | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
|last=Hankins | |||
|first=Barry | |||
|year=2002 | |||
|title=Uneasy in Babylon: Southern Baptist Conservatives and American Culture | |||
|location=Tuscaloosa, Alabama | |||
|publisher=University of Alabama Press | |||
|isbn=978-0-8173-5081-9 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
|last=Humphreys | |||
|first=Fisher | |||
|year=2002 | |||
|title=The Way We Were: How Southern Baptist Theology Has Changed and What It Means to Us All | |||
|location=Macon, Georgia | |||
|publisher=Smyth & Helwys | |||
|isbn=978-1-57312-376-1 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite journal | |||
|last=Isaac | |||
|first=Rhys | |||
|author-link=Rhys Isaac | |||
|year=1974 | |||
|title=Evangelical Revolt: The Nature of the Baptists' Challenge to the Traditional Order in Virginia, 1765 to 1775 | |||
|journal=] | |||
|volume=31 | |||
|issue=3 | |||
|pages=345–68 | |||
|doi=10.2307/1921628 | |||
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|last4=Showalter | |||
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|year=2006 | |||
|title=The Fundamentalist Takeover in the Southern Baptist Convention: A Brief History | |||
|url=http://www.sbctakeover.com/TakeoverBook.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091104080306/http://www.sbctakeover.com/TakeoverBook.pdf |archive-date=2009-11-04 |url-status=live | |||
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|title = A Global Introduction to Baptist Churches | |||
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|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=DnsXxtEiNlAC | |||
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|title=American Slavery, 1619–1877 | |||
|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780809015542 | |||
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|publisher=Hill & Wang | |||
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* {{cite journal | |||
|last=Kroll-Smith | |||
|first=J. Stephen | |||
|year=1984 | |||
|title=Transmitting a Revival Culture: The Organizational Dynamic of the Baptist Movement in Colonial Virginia, 1760–1777 | |||
|journal=Journal of Southern History | |||
|volume=50 | |||
|issue=4 | |||
|pages=551–68 | |||
|doi=10.2307/2208472 | |||
|jstor=2208472 | |||
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* {{cite book | |||
|last=McBeth | |||
|first=H. Leon | |||
|year=1987 | |||
|title=The Baptist Heritage: Four Centuries of Baptist Witness | |||
|location=Nashville, Tennessee | |||
|publisher=Broadman Press | |||
|isbn=978-0-8054-6569-3 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite encyclopedia | |||
|editor1-last=Miller | |||
|editor1-first=Randall M. | |||
|editor2-last=Smith | |||
|editor2-first=John David | |||
|year=1997 | |||
|title=Dictionary of Afro-American Slavery | |||
|edition=2nd | |||
|location=Westport, Connecticut | |||
|publisher=Praeger Publishers | |||
|isbn=978-0-275-95799-5 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
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|first1=Aldon D. | |||
|author1-link=Aldon Morris | |||
|last2=Lee | |||
|first2=Shayne | |||
|year=2005 | |||
|chapter=The National Baptist Convention: Traditions and Contemporary Challenges | |||
|chapter-url=http://hirr.hartsem.edu/denom/AMorrisAndSLeeNBC.pdf | |||
|editor1-last=Roozen | |||
|editor1-first=David A. | |||
|editor2-last=Nieman | |||
|editor2-first=James R. | |||
|title=Church, Identity, and Changes: Theology and Denominational Structures in Unsettled Times | |||
|url-status=live | |||
|location=Grand Rapids, Michigan | |||
|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. | |||
|pages=336–379 | |||
|isbn=978-0-8028-2819-4 | |||
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150906151632/http://hirr.hartsem.edu/denom/AMorrisAndSLeeNBC.pdf | |||
|archive-date=September 6, 2015 | |||
|access-date=October 25, 2016 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
|year=2007 | |||
|chapter=Divergent Worship Practices in the Sunday Morning Hour: Analysis of an 'Interracial' Church Merger Attempt | |||
|first1=Kersten Bayt | |||
|last1=Priest | |||
|first2=Robert J. | |||
|last2=Priest | |||
|editor1-last=Priest | |||
|editor1-first=Robert J. | |||
|editor2-last=Nieves | |||
|editor2-first=Alvaro L. | |||
|title=This Side of Heaven: Race, Ethnicity, and Christian Faith | |||
|publisher=Oxford University Press | |||
|pages=275–292 | |||
|doi=10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195310566.001.0001 | |||
|isbn=978-0-19-531056-6 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
|year=2007 | |||
|chapter=Appendix I: Timeline: Race and Ethnicity in the United States | |||
|editor1-last=Priest | |||
|editor1-first=Robert J. | |||
|editor2-last=Nieves | |||
|editor2-first=Alvaro L. | |||
|title=This Side of Heaven: Race, Ethnicity, and Christian Faith | |||
|publisher=Oxford University Press | |||
|pages=335–339 | |||
|doi=10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195310566.001.0001 | |||
|isbn=978-0-19-531056-6 | |||
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* {{cite book | |||
|last=Raboteau | |||
|first=Albert J. | |||
|author-link=Albert J. Raboteau | |||
|year=2004 | |||
|title=Slave Religion: The "Invisible Institution" in the Antebellum South | |||
|edition=updated | |||
|publisher=Oxford University Press | |||
|isbn=978-0-19-517413-7 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
|last=Taylor | |||
|first=James B. | |||
|year=1859 | |||
|title=Virginia Baptist Ministers | |||
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O6acydIhxlEC | |||
|volume=1 | |||
|location=New York | |||
|publisher=Sheldon and Company | |||
|access-date=October 15, 2016 | |||
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* {{cite book | |||
|last=Tull | |||
|first=James E. | |||
|year=2000 | |||
|title=High-Church Baptists in the South: The Origin, Nature, and Influence of Landmarkism | |||
|edition=rev. | |||
|location=Macon, Georgia | |||
|publisher=Mercer University Press | |||
|isbn=978-0-86554-705-6 | |||
}} | |||
{{refend}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
{{refbegin|35em|indent=yes}} | |||
* {{Citation | last = Ammerman | first = Nancy | title = Baptist Battles: Social Change and Religious Conflict in the Southern Baptist Convention | publisher = Rutgers University Press | year = 1990}}. | |||
* {{Citation | editor-last = Ammerman | editor-first = Nancy | title = Southern Baptists Observed | publisher = University of Tennessee Press | year = 1993 | editor-mask = {{longdash}}}}. | |||
* {{Citation | editor-last = Baker | editor-first = Robert | title = A Baptist Source Book | place = Nashville, TN | publisher = Broadman | year = 1966}}. | |||
* {{Citation | last = Baker | first = Robert | title = The Southern Baptist Convention and Its People, 1607–1972 | publisher = Broadman | year = 1974 | author-mask = {{long dash}}}}. | |||
* Barnes, William. ''The Southern Baptist Convention, 1845–1953'' Broadman Press, 1954. | |||
* Eighmy, John. ''Churches in Cultural Captivity: A History of the Social Attitudes of Southern Baptists.'' University of Tennessee Press, 1972. | |||
* ''Encyclopedia of Southern Baptists: Presenting Their History, Doctrine, Polity, Life, Leadership, Organization & Work'' Knoxville: Broadman Press, v 1–2 (1958), 1500 pp; 2 supplementary volumes 1958 and 1962; vol 5. Index, 1984 | |||
* Farnsley II, Arthur Emery, ''Southern Baptist Politics: Authority and Power in the Restructuring of an American Denomination''; Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994 | |||
* Flowers, Elizabeth H. ''Into the Pulpit: Southern Baptist Women and Power Since World War II'' (University of North Carolina Press; 2012) 263 pages; examines women's submission to male authority as a pivotal issue in the clash between conservatives and moderates in the SBC | |||
* Fuller, A. James. ''Chaplain to the Confederacy: Basil Manly and Baptist Life in the Old South'' (2002) | * Fuller, A. James. ''Chaplain to the Confederacy: Basil Manly and Baptist Life in the Old South'' (2002) | ||
* Gatewood, Willard. ''Controversy in the 1920s: Fundamentalism, Modernism, and Evolution'' |
* Gatewood, Willard. ''Controversy in the 1920s: Fundamentalism, Modernism, and Evolution.'' Vanderbilt University Press, 1969. | ||
* Harvey, Paul. ''Redeeming the South: Religious Cultures and Racial Identities among Southern Baptists, 1865–1925.'' University of North Carolina Press, 1997 | |||
* Barry Hankins. ''Religion and American Culture''. Tuscaloosa and London: University of Alabama Press, 2002. Argues that Baptist conservatives see themselves as cultural warriors critiquing a secular and liberal America | |||
* Hill, Samuel, et al. ''Encyclopedia of Religion in the South'' (2005) | |||
* Paul Harvey, ''Redeeming the South: Religious Cultures and Racial Identities among Southern Baptists, 1865-1925'' University of North Carolina Press, 1997 | |||
* Hunt, Alma. ''Woman's Missionary Union'' (1964) | |||
* Heyrman, Christine Leigh. ''Southern Cross: The Beginnings of the Bible Belt'' (1998) 1770-1860 | |||
* Kell, Carl L. and L. Raymond Camp, ''In the Name of the Father: The Rhetoric of the New Southern Baptist Convention.'' Southern Illinois University Press, 1999. | |||
* Hill, Samuel, et al. ''Encyclopedia of Religion In The South'' (2005) | |||
* |
* Kidd, Thomas S. and Barry Hankins. ''Baptists in America: A History.'' Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 2015. | ||
* Leonard, Bill J. ''God's Last and Only Hope: The Fragmentation of the Southern Baptist Convention.'' Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1990. | |||
* William L. Lumpkin, ''Baptist History in the South: Tracing through the Separates the Influence of the Great Awakening, 1754-1787 '' (1995) | |||
* Lumpkin, William L. ''Baptist History in the South: Tracing through the Separates the Influence of the Great Awakening, 1754–1787'' (1995) | |||
* Leonard, Bill J. ''God's Last and Only Hope: The Fragmentation of the Southern Baptist Convention''. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1990. | |||
* McSwain, Larry L. ''Loving Beyond Your Theology: The Life and Ministry of Jimmy Raymond Allen'' (Mercer University Press; 2010) 255 pages. A biography of the Arkansas-born pastor (b. 1927), who was the last moderate president of the SBC | |||
* Marsden, George. ''Fundamentalism and American Culture: The Shaping of 20th Century Evangelicalism''. New York: Oxford University Press, 1980. | |||
* |
* Marsden, George. ''Fundamentalism and American Culture: The Shaping of 20th Century Evangelicalism.'' Oxford University Press, 1980. | ||
* {{Citation | title = Religious Congregations & Membership in the United States | year = 2000 | publisher = Glenmary Research Center}}. | |||
* T. Laine Scales. ''All That Fits a Woman: Training Southern Baptist Women for Charity and Mission, 1907-1926'' Mercer U. Press 2002 | |||
* {{Citation | last = Rosenberg | first = Ellen | title = The Southern Baptists: A Subculture in Transition | publisher = University of Tennessee Press | year = 1989}}. | |||
* Rufus B. Spain, ''At Ease in Zion: A Social History of Southern Baptists, 1865-1900" (Nashville, 1961) | |||
* Scales, T. Laine. ''All That Fits a Woman: Training Southern Baptist Women for Charity and Mission, 1907–1926'' Mercer U. Press 2002 | |||
* Jerry Sutton, ''The Baptist Reformation: The Conservative Resurgence in the Southern Baptist Convention'' (2000). "a testimony and an expression of gratitude to those who worked to bring about the Baptist Reformation" according to publisher | |||
* Smith, Oran P. ''The Rise of Baptist Republicanism'' (1997), on recent voting behavior | |||
*Gregory A. Wills, ''Democratic Religion: Freedom, Authority, and Church Discipline in the Baptist South, 1785-1900'' Oxford University Press, 1997 | |||
* Spain, Rufus B.'' At Ease in Zion: A Social History of Southern Baptists, 1865–1900'' (1961) | |||
* Sutton, Jerry. ''The Baptist Reformation: The Conservative Resurgence in the Southern Baptist Convention'' (2000). | |||
* Wills, Gregory A.'' Democratic Religion: Freedom, Authority, and Church Discipline in the Baptist South, 1785–1900.'' Oxford University Press, 1997 | |||
* Yarnell III, Malcolm B. ''The Formation of Christian Doctrine'' (2007), on Baptist theology | |||
{{refend}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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Latest revision as of 21:32, 21 December 2024
Christian denomination
Southern Baptist Convention | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | SBC; GCB |
Classification | Protestant |
Orientation | Baptist |
Theology | Evangelical |
Polity | Congregational |
President | Clint Pressley |
Region | United States |
Origin | May 8–12, 1845 Augusta, Georgia, U.S. |
Separated from | Triennial Convention (1845) |
Separations | |
Congregations | 46,906 (2023) |
Members | 12,982,090 (2023)
Weekly attendance = 4,050,668 (2023) |
Missionary organization | International Mission Board |
Aid organization | Southern Baptist Disaster Relief |
Other name(s) | Great Commission Baptists |
Official website | sbc |
Southern Baptists |
---|
Background
General / Strict / Reformed Baptists |
Beliefs |
People |
Related organizations |
Seminaries |
The Southern Baptist Convention (SBC), alternatively the Great Commission Baptists (GCB), is a Christian denomination based in the United States. It is the world's largest Baptist organization, the largest Protestant, and the second-largest Christian body in the United States. The SBC is a cooperation of fully autonomous, independent churches with commonly held essential beliefs that pool some resources for missions.
Churches affiliated with the denomination are evangelical in doctrine and practice, emphasizing the significance of the individual conversion experience. This conversion is then affirmed by the person being completely immersed in water for a believer's baptism. Baptism is believed to be separate from salvation and is a public and symbolic expression of faith, burial of previous life, and resurrection to new life; it is not a requirement for salvation. The denomination has a male pastorate, often citing 1 Timothy 2:12 as the reason it does not ordain women. All affiliated churches deny the legitimacy of same-sex marriage, saying that marriage can only be between a man and a woman and also that all sexual relations should occur only within the confines of marriage. Other specific beliefs based on biblical interpretation vary by congregational polity, often to balance local church autonomy.
In 1845, the Southern Baptists separated from the Triennial Convention, as American society divided over racial attitudes and slavery. In 1995, the denomination apologized for racial positions in its history, and at present, the Southern Baptist Convention is racially diverse, with one in four congregations having a nonwhite majority. Since the 1940s, it has spread across the United States, with tens of thousands of affiliated churches and 41 affiliated state conventions. Beginning in the late 1970s, a conservative movement began to take control of the organization. By the 1990s, this movement had succeeded in taking control of the leadership of the SBC.
Self-reported membership peaked in 2006 at roughly 16 million. Membership has contracted by an estimated 13.6% since that year, with 2020 marking the 14th year of continuous decline. Mean organization-wide weekly attendance dropped about 27% between 2006 and 2020. The denomination reported increased participation and a slowing of the rate of overall membership decline for the year 2023. For the same year, it reported nearly 13 million members.
Name
The official name is the Southern Baptist Convention. The word Southern in "Southern Baptist Convention" stems from its 1845 organization in Augusta, Georgia, by white Baptists in the Southern United States who supported continuing the institution of slavery and split from the northern Baptists (known today as the American Baptist Churches USA), who did not support funding evangelists engaging in slavery in the Southern United States.
In 2012, the organization adopted the descriptor Great Commission Baptists after the election of its first African American president. Additionally, in 2020, some leaders of the Southern Baptists wanted to change its name to "Great Commission Baptists" to distance itself from its white supremacist foundation, and because it is no longer a specifically Southern church. Several churches affiliated with the denomination have also begun to identify as "Great Commission Baptists".
History
Further information: Baptists in the United StatesColonial era
Most early Baptists in the British colonies came from England in the 17th century, after conflict with the Church of England for their dissenting religious views. In 1638, Roger Williams founded the first Baptist church in British America at the Providence Plantations, the first permanent European American settlement also founded by Williams in Rhode Island. The oldest Baptist church in the South, First Baptist Church of Charleston, South Carolina, was organized in 1682 under the leadership of William Screven. A Baptist church was formed in Virginia in 1715 through the preaching of Robert Norden and another in North Carolina in 1727 through the ministry of Paul Palmer.
The Baptists adhered to a congregationalist polity. They operated independently of the state-established Anglican churches in the Southern United States at a time when states prohibited non-Anglicans from holding political office. By 1740, about eight Baptist churches existed in the colonies of Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, with an estimated 300 to 400 members. New members, both black and white, were converted chiefly by Baptist preachers who traveled throughout the Southern United States during the 18th and 19th centuries, in the eras of the First and Second Great Awakenings.
Black churches were founded in Virginia, South Carolina, and Georgia before the American Revolution. Some black congregations kept their independence even after whites tried to exercise more authority after Nat Turner's Rebellion of 1831.
American Revolution period
Before the American Revolution, Baptist and Methodist evangelicals in the Southern United States promoted the view of the common person's equality before God, which embraced enslaved people and free blacks. They challenged the hierarchies of class and race and urged planters to abolish slavery. They welcomed enslaved people as Baptists and accepted them as preachers.
During this time, there was a sharp division between the austerity of the plain-living Baptists, attracted initially from yeomen and common planters, and the opulence of the Anglican planters—the enslaving elite who controlled local and colonial government in what had become an enslaved society by the late 18th century. The gentry interpreted Baptist church discipline as political radicalism, but it served to ameliorate disorder. The Baptists intensely monitored each other's moral conduct, watching especially for sexual transgressions, cursing, and excessive drinking; they expelled members who would not reform.
In Virginia and most southern colonies before the American Revolution, the Church of England was the established church and supported by general taxes, as it was in England. It opposed the rapid spread of Baptists in the Southern United States. Particularly, Virginia prosecuted many Baptist preachers for "disturbing the peace" by preaching without licenses from the Anglican Church. Patrick Henry and James Madison defended Baptist preachers before the American Revolution in cases considered significant in the history of religious freedom. In 1779, Thomas Jefferson wrote the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, enacted in 1786 by the Virginia General Assembly. Madison later applied his ideas and those of the Virginia document related to religious freedom during the Constitutional Convention, when he ensured that delegates incorporated them into the United States Constitution.
The struggle for religious tolerance erupted during the American Revolution, as the Baptists worked to disestablish the Anglican churches in the South. The Baptists protested vigorously; the resulting social disorder resulted chiefly from the ruling gentry's disregard for public needs. The vitality of the religious opposition made the conflict between "evangelical" and "gentry" styles bitter. Scholarship suggests that the evangelical movement's strength determined its ability to mobilize power outside the conventional authority structure.
National unification and regional division
Main article: Triennial ConventionIn 1814, leaders such as Luther Rice helped Baptists unify nationally under what became known informally as the Triennial Convention (because it met every three years) based in Philadelphia. It allowed them to join their resources to support missions abroad. The Home Mission Society, affiliated with the Triennial Convention, was established in 1832 to support missions in U.S. frontier territories. By the mid-19th century, there were many social, cultural, economic, and political differences among business owners of the North, farmers of the West, and planters of the South. The most divisive conflict was primarily over the issue of slavery and, secondarily, over missions.
Divisions over slavery
See also: Christian views on slaveryThe issues surrounding slavery dominated the 19th century in the United States. This created tension between Baptists in northern and southern U.S. states over the issue of manumission. In the two decades after the American Revolution during the Second Great Awakening, northern Baptist preachers (as well as the Quakers and Methodists) increasingly argued that enslavers must free the people they enslaved. Although most Baptists in the 19th century south were yeomen farmers and common planters, the Baptists also began to attract major planters among their membership. The southern pastors interpreted the Bible as supporting slavery and encouraged paternalistic practices by enslavers. They preached to enslaved people to accept their places and obey their enslavers and welcomed enslaved people and free blacks as members; whites controlled the churches' leadership and usually segregated church seating. From the early 19th century, many Baptist preachers in the Southern United States also argued in favor of preserving the right of ministers to be enslavers.
Black congregations were sometimes the largest in their regions. For instance, by 1821, Gillfield Baptist in Petersburg, Virginia, had the largest congregation within the Portsmouth Association. At 441 members, it was more than twice as large as the next-biggest church. Before Nat Turner's Rebellion of 1831, Gillfield had a black preacher. Afterward, the state legislature insisted that white men oversee black congregations. Gillfield could not call a black preacher until after the American Civil War and emancipation. After Turner's rebellion, whites worked to exert more control over black congregations and passed laws requiring white ministers to lead or be present at religious meetings. Many enslaved people evaded these restrictions.
The Triennial Convention and the Home Mission Society adopted a kind of neutrality concerning slavery, neither condoning nor condemning it. During the "Georgia Test Case" of 1844, the Georgia State Convention proposed the appointment of the enslaver Elder James E. Reeve as a missionary. The Foreign Mission Board refused to approve his appointment, recognizing the case as a challenge and not wanting to violate their neutrality on slavery. They said that slavery should not be a factor in deliberations about missionary appointments.
In 1844, University of Alabama president Basil Manly Sr., a prominent preacher and major planter who enslaved 40 people, drafted the "Alabama Resolutions" and presented them to the Triennial Convention. They included the demand that enslavers be eligible for denominational offices to which the Southern associations contributed financially. They were not adopted. Georgia Baptists decided to test the claimed neutrality by recommending an enslaver to the Home Mission Society as a missionary. The Home Mission Society's board refused to appoint him, noting that missionaries were not allowed to take servants with them (so he clearly could not enslave people) and that they would not make a decision that appeared to endorse slavery. Southern Baptists considered this an infringement of their right to determine candidates. From the Southern perspective, the Northern position that "slaveholding brethren were less than followers of Jesus" effectively obligated enslavers to leave the fellowship. This difference came to a head in 1845 when representatives of the northern states refused to appoint missionaries whose families enslaved people. To continue in the work of missions, the southern Baptists separated and created the Southern Baptist Convention.
Missions and organization
A secondary issue that disturbed the Southerners was the perception that the American Baptist Home Mission Society did not appoint a proportionate number of missionaries to the South. This was likely a result of the society's not appointing enslavers as missionaries. Baptists in the North preferred a loosely structured society of individuals who paid annual dues, with each society usually focused on a single ministry.
Baptists in Southern churches preferred a more centralized organization of churches patterned after their associations, with a variety of ministries brought under the direction of one denominational organization. The increasing tensions and the discontent of Baptists from the Southern United States over national criticism of slavery and issues over missions led to their withdrawal from national Baptist organizations.
The Southern Baptists met at the First Baptist Church of Augusta in May 1845. At this meeting, they created a new convention—the Southern Baptist Convention. They elected William Bullein Johnson (1782–1862) as its first president. He had served as president of the Triennial Convention in 1841, though he initially attempted to avoid a schism.
Formation and separation of black Baptists
African Americans had gathered in their own churches early on, in 1774 in Petersburg, Virginia, and in Savannah, Georgia, in 1788. Some established churches after 1800 on the frontier, such as the First African Baptist Church of Lexington, Kentucky. In 1824, the Elkhorn Association of Kentucky, which was white-dominated, accepted it. By 1850, First African had 1,820 members, the largest of any Baptist church in the state, black or white. In 1861, it had 2,223 members.
Southern whites generally required black churches to have white ministers and trustees. In churches with mixed congregations, seating was segregated, with blacks out of sight, often in a balcony. White preaching often emphasized Biblical stipulations that enslaved people should accept their places and try to behave well toward their enslavers. After the American Civil War, another split occurred when most freedmen set up independent black congregations, regional associations, and state and national conventions. Black people wanted to practice Christianity independently of white supervision. They interpreted the Bible as offering hope for deliverance and saw their exodus out of enslavement as comparable to the Exodus, with abolitionist John Brown as their Moses. They quickly left white-dominated churches and associations and set up separate state Baptist conventions. In 1866, black Baptists of the Southern and Western United States combined to form the Consolidated American Baptist Convention. In 1895, they merged three national conventions to create the National Baptist Convention, USA. With more than eight million members, it is today the largest African American religious organization and second in size to the Southern Baptists.
Free black people in the North founded churches and denominations in the early 19th century independent of white-dominated organizations. In the Reconstruction era, missionaries, both black and white, from several northern denominations worked in the South; they quickly attracted tens and hundreds of thousands of new members from among the millions of freedmen. The African Methodist Episcopal Church attracted more new members than any other denomination. White Southern Baptist churches lost black members to the new denominations, as well as to independent congregations which freedmen organized.
During the civil rights movement, many Southern Baptist pastors and members of their congregations rejected racial integration and accepted white supremacy, further alienating African Americans. According to historian and former Southern Baptist Wayne Flynt, "The church was the last bastion of segregation." SBC did not integrate seminary classrooms until 1951.
In 1995, the convention voted to adopt a resolution in which it renounced its racist roots and apologized for its past defense of slavery, segregation, and white supremacy. This marked the denomination's first formal acknowledgment that racism had played a profound role in both its early and modern history.
Increasing diversity and policy changes
By the early 21st century, the number of ethnically diverse congregations was increasing among the Southern Baptists. In 2008, almost 20% of the congregations were majority African American, Asian, Hispanic, or Latino. SBC cooperating churches had an estimated one million African American members. It has passed a series of resolutions recommending including more black members and appointing more African American leaders. At its 2012 annual meeting, it elected Pastor Fred Luter of the Franklin Avenue Baptist Church as its first African American president. He had earned respect by showing leadership skills in building a large congregation in New Orleans.
The SBC's increasingly national scope inspired some members to suggest a name change. In 2005, some members made proposals at the SBC Annual Meeting to change the name to the more national-sounding "North American Baptist Convention" or "Scriptural Baptist Convention" (to retain the SBC initials). These proposals were defeated.
The messengers of the 2012 annual meeting in New Orleans voted to adopt the descriptor "Great Commission Baptists". The legal name remained "Southern Baptist Convention", but affiliated churches and convention entities could voluntarily use the descriptor.
Almost a year after the Charleston church shooting, the denomination approved a resolution that called upon member churches and families to stop flying the Confederate flag.
The church approved a resolution, "On Refugee Ministry", encouraging member churches and families to welcome refugees coming to the United States. In the same convention, Russell Moore of the Southern Baptist Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission quickly responded to a pastor who asked why a member should support the right of Muslims living in the U.S. to build mosques. Moore replied, "Sometimes we have to deal with questions that are really complicated... this isn't one of them." Moore said that religious freedom must be for all religions.
From February to June 2016, the denomination collaborated with the National Baptist Convention, USA, on racial reconciliation. SBC-GCB and NBC presidents Ronnie Floyd and Jerry Young assembled ten pastors from each convention in 2015, discussing race relations; in 2016, Baptist Press and The New York Times revealed tension among National Baptists debating any collaboration with Southern Baptists, quoting NBC President Young:
I've never said this to Dr. Floyd, but I've had fellows in my own denomination who called me and said: "What are you doing? I mean, are you not aware of the history?" And I say, obviously I'm aware. They bring up the issue about slavery and that becomes a reason, they say, that we ought not to be involved with the Southern Baptists. Where from my vantage point, that's reverse racism. I do understand the history, and I understand the pain of the past...But what I'm also quite clear about is, if the Gospel does anything at all, the Gospel demands that we not only preach but practice reconciliation.
— Dr. Jerry Young, NBC USA
After an initial resolution denouncing the alt-right movement failed to make it to the convention floor, the denomination officially denounced the alt-right movement at the 2017 convention. On November 5, 2017, a mass shooting took place at the First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs. It was the deadliest shooting to occur at any affiliated church in its history and, in modern history, at an American place of worship.
In 2020, the denomination canceled its convention due to COVID-19 concerns and eventually rescheduled for June 2021.
In a Washington Post story dated September 15, 2020, Greear said some Southern Baptist Convention leaders wanted to change the official name of the church to "Great Commission Baptists" (GCB), to distance the church from its support of slavery and because it is no longer just a Southern church. Since then, several leaders and churches have begun adopting the alternative descriptor for their churches.
Sexual abuse scandal
Main article: Sexual abuse cases in Southern Baptist churchesIn 2018, investigations showed that the SBC suppressed reports of sexual abuse and protected over 700 accused ministers and church workers. In 2022, a report indicated church leaders had stonewalled and disparaged clergy sex abuse survivors for nearly two decades; reform efforts had been met with criticism or dismissal from other organization leaders; and known abusers had been allowed to keep their positions without informing their local churches. On August 12, 2022, the denomination announced that it was facing a federal investigation into the scandal.
On February 10, 2019, a joint investigation by the Houston Chronicle and the San Antonio Express found that there had been over 700 victims of sexual abuse by nearly 400 Southern Baptist church leaders, pastors, and volunteers over the previous 20 years.
In 2018, the Houston Chronicle verified details of hundreds of accounts of abuse. It examined federal and state court databases, prison records, and official documents from more than 20 states and researched sex offender registries nationwide. The Chronicle compiled a list of records and information (current as of June 2019) listing church pastors, leaders, employees, and volunteers who have pleaded guilty to or were convicted of sex crimes.
On June 12, 2019, during their annual meeting, convention messengers, who assembled that year in Birmingham, Alabama, approved a resolution condemning sex abuse and establishing a special committee to investigate sex abuse, which will make it easier for the convention to excommunicate churches. The Reverend J. D. Greear, president of the convention and pastor of The Summit Church in Durham, North Carolina, called the move a "defining moment". Ronnie Floyd, president of the convention's executive committee, echoed Greear's remarks, calling the vote "a very, very significant moment in the history of the Southern Baptist Convention".
In June 2021, letters from former policy director Russell D. Moore to convention leadership were leaked. In the letters, Moore described how the convention had mishandled claims of sexual abuse.
On May 22, 2022, Guidepost Solutions, an independent firm contracted by the organization's executive committee, released a report detailing that church leaders had stonewalled and disparaged clergy sex abuse survivors for nearly two decades. It was then the most extensive investigation undertaken in the convention's history, with $4 million reportedly spent by the organization to fund the inquiry. The report also found that known abusers were allowed to keep their positions without informing their church or congregation. The report alleged that while the convention had elected a president, J. D. Greear, in 2018 who made addressing sexual abuse a central part of his agenda, nearly all efforts at reform had been met with criticism and dismissal by other organization leaders.
On June 14, 2022, the denomination voted "to create a way to track pastors and other church workers credibly accused of sex abuse and launch a new task force to oversee further reforms" after a consultant exposed that "Southern Baptist leaders mishandled abuse cases and stonewalled victims for years". The new task force will operate for one year, with the option to continue longer.
On August 12, 2022, the organization announced that it was facing a federal investigation into the sex abuse scandal. As revelations of sexual abuse and lawsuits continued to emerge in 2023, the SBC's Abuse Reform Implementation Task Force announced continued development of the database of sexual offenders.
Doctrine
The Baptist Faith and Message (BF&M) represents the general theological perspective of the denomination's churches. The convention first drafted the BF&M in 1925 as a revision of the 1833 New Hampshire Confession of Faith. The convention revised the BF&M significantly in 1963, amended it in 1998 to add one new section on the family, and revised it again in 2000. The 1998 and 2000 changes were the subject of much controversy, particularly regarding the role of women in the church.
The BF&M is not a creed, such as the Nicene Creed. Members are not required to adhere to it, and churches and state conventions belonging to the global body are not required to use it as their statement of faith or doctrine, though many do in lieu of creating their own statement. Nevertheless, key leaders, faculty in denomination-owned seminaries, and missionaries who apply to serve through the various missionary agencies must affirm that their practices, doctrine, and preaching are consistent with the BF&M.
In 2012, a LifeWay Research survey of the denomination's pastors found that 30% of churches identified with the labels Calvinist or Reformed, while 30% identified with the labels Arminian or Wesleyan. LifeWay Research President Ed Stetzer said, "historically, many Baptists have considered themselves neither Calvinist nor Arminian, but holding a unique theological approach not framed well by either category". The survey also found that 60% of its pastors were concerned about Calvinism's impact within the convention. Nathan Finn writes that the debate over Calvinism has "periodically reignited with increasing intensity" and that non-Calvinists "seem to be especially concerned with the influence of Founders Ministries" while Calvinists "seem to be particularly concerned with the influence of revivalism and Keswick theology."
Historically, the denomination has not considered glossolalia or other Charismatic beliefs to be in accordance with Scriptural teaching, though the BF&M does not mention the subject. In 2015, the International Mission Board lifted a ban on glossolalia for its missionaries while reaffirming that it should not be taught as normative.
The convention brings together fundamentalist and moderate churches.
Position statements
In addition to the BF&M, the denomination has also issued position statements affirming the autonomy of the local church; identifying the Cooperative Program of missions as integral to the denomination; that statements of belief are revisable in light of Scripture, though the Bible is the final word; honoring the indigenous principle in missions without compromising doctrine or its identity for missional opportunities; that laypersons have the same right as ordained ministers to communicate with God, interpret Scripture, and minister in Christ's name; that "At the moment of conception, a new being enters the universe, a human being, a being created in God's image", who as such should be protected regardless of the circumstances of the conception; that God's plan for marriage and sexual intimacy is a lifetime relationship of one man and one woman, rejecting homosexuality; understanding the Bible to forbid any form of extramarital sexual relations; affirming the accountability of each person before God; and that women are not eligible to serve as pastors.
In 2022, it passed a resolution against prosperity theology, which it considers a heretical distortion of the message of the Bible.
Abortion
The position of many Southern Baptists on abortion has changed significantly over time, evolving from acceptance under certain circumstances to firm opposition.
In 1971, the SBC passed a resolution urging a loosening of U.S. abortion laws, stating:
Be it further resolved, that we call upon Southern Baptists to work for legislation that will allow the possibility of abortion under such conditions as rape, incest, clear evidence of severe fetal deformity, and carefully ascertained evidence of the likelihood of damage to the emotional, mental, and physical health of the mother.
In 1973, a "poll conducted by the Baptist Standard news journal found that 90 percent of Texas Baptists believed their state's abortion laws were too restrictive".
During this era, a majority of Southern Baptists, including a few conservatives within the denomination, supported a moderate expansion of abortion rights, seeing it as a matter of religious liberty, what they saw as a lack of biblical condemnation, and belief in non-intrusive government. Southern Baptists' and evangelicals' initial reaction to Roe v. Wade decision was one of support or indifference; they overwhelmingly viewed anti-abortion movements as a sectarian and Catholic concern. By the mid-1970s, this began to change, as a movement that sought to change Southern Baptists' opinions on abortion began to incline them against it substantially. Over that period, the SBC changed in other ways as well. Today, the SBC strongly opposes abortion.
Gender-based roles
Officially, the denomination subscribes to the complementarian view of gender roles. Beginning in the early 1970s, as a reaction to their perceptions of various "women's liberation movements", the church, along with several other historically conservative Baptist groups, began to assert its view of the propriety and primacy of what it deemed "traditional gender roles" as a body. In 1973, at the annual meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention, delegates passed a resolution that read in part: "Man was not made for woman, but the woman for the man. Woman is the glory of man. Woman would not have existed without man." In 1998, the convention appended a male leadership understanding of marriage to the 1963 version of the Baptist Faith and Message, with an official amendment: Article XVIII, "The Family". In 2000, it revised the document to reflect support for a male-only pastorate with no mention of the office of deacon.
In 1984, when it had about 250 women pastors, the Convention adopted a resolution affirming the exclusion of women from pastoral leadership.
Since 1987, various local associations and regional conventions have considered churches that have authorized the pastoral ministry of women to not be in friendly cooperation (or "disfellowshipped") without the intervention of the national convention on the subject.
By explicitly defining the pastoral office as the exclusive domain of males, the 2000 BF&M provision became the Southern Baptist's first-ever official position against women pastors. As individual churches affiliated with the organization are autonomous, churches cannot be forced to adopt a male-only pastorate.
Some churches that have installed women as their pastors have been disfellowshipped from membership in their local associations; a smaller number have been disfellowshipped from their affiliated state conventions. In February 2023, the Executive Committee for the first time deemed five churches that had appointed women pastors to not be in friendly cooperation. In June 2023, when two churches requested a review of the decision, 88% of church representatives at the annual convention voted to uphold the decision. American Reformer magazine estimated the convention would have 1,844 female pastors in 2023.
The crystallization of the church's positions on gender roles and restrictions on women's participation in the pastorate contributed to the decision by members now belonging to the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, which broke from the convention in 1991. Another denomination that broke off, the Alliance of Baptists, also accepts women's ordination.
The 2000 BF&M prescribes a husband-headship authority structure, closely following the apostle Paul's exhortations in Ephesians 5:21–33:
Article XVIII. 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. She, being in the image of God as is her husband and thus equal to him, has the God-given responsibility to respect her husband and to serve as his helper in managing the household and nurturing the next generation.
Ordinances
Southern/Great Commission Baptists observe two ordinances: the Lord's Supper and believer's baptism (also known as credo-baptism, from the Latin for "I believe"). Furthermore, they hold the historic Baptist belief that immersion is the only valid mode of baptism. The Baptist Faith and Message describes baptism as a symbolic act of obedience and a testimony of the believer's faith in Jesus Christ to other people. The BF&M also notes that baptism is a precondition to congregational church membership.
The BF&M holds to memorialism, the belief that the Lord's Supper is a symbolic act of obedience in which believers commemorate the death of Christ and look forward to his Second Coming. Individual churches are free to practice either open or closed communion (due to the convention's belief in congregational polity and the autonomy of the local church), but most practice open communion. For the same reason, the frequency of observance of the Lord's Supper varies from church to church. Churches commonly observe it quarterly, but some churches offer it monthly; a small minority offer it weekly. Because the organization has traditionally opposed alcoholic beverage consumption by members, grape juice is used instead of wine.
Worship
Most members observe a low church form of worship, which is less formal and uses no stated liturgy. The form of the worship services generally depends on whether the congregation uses a traditional or a contemporary service, or a mix of both—the main differences concerning music and the response to the sermon.
In both types of services, there will be a prayer at the opening of the service, before the sermon, and at closing. Offerings are taken, which may be around the middle of the service or at the end (with the increased popularity of electronic financial systems, some churches operate kiosks allowing givers the opportunity to do so online or through a phone app or website link). Responsive Scripture readings are uncommon but may be done on a special occasion.
In a traditional service, the music typically features hymns accompanied by a piano or organ (churches have generally phased out the latter due to a shift in worship preferences) and sometimes with a special featured soloist or choir. Smaller churches typically let anyone participate in the choir regardless of actual singing ability; larger churches will limit participation to those who have successfully tried out for a role. After the sermon, an invitation to respond (sometimes termed an altar call) might be given; people may respond during the invitation by receiving Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior and beginning Christian discipleship, seeking baptism or requesting to join the congregation, or entering into vocational ministry or making some other publicly stated decision. Churches may schedule baptisms on specific weekends, or (especially in buildings with built-in baptisteries) be readily available for anyone desiring baptism.
In a contemporary service, the music generally features modern songs led by a praise team or similarly named group with featured singers. Choirs are not as common. An altar call may or may not be given at the end; if not, interested persons are directed to seek out people in the lobby who can address any questions. Baptismal services are usually scheduled as specific and special events. Also, church membership is usually done periodically by attending specific classes about the church's history, beliefs, what it seeks to accomplish, and what is expected of a prospective member. Controversially, churches may ask a member to sign a "membership covenant", a document with the prospective member's promise to perform certain tasks (regular church attendance at main services and small groups, regular giving—sometimes even requiring tithing, and service within the church). Such covenants are highly controversial: among other things, such a covenant may not permit a member to withdraw from membership to avoid church discipline voluntarily, or, in some cases, the member cannot leave at all (even when not under discipline) without the approval of church leadership. A Dallas/Fort Worth church was forced to apologize to a member who attempted to do so for failing to request permission to annul her marriage after her husband admitted to viewing child pornography.
Statistics
Membership
Year | Membership |
---|---|
1845 | 350,000 |
1860 | 650,000 |
1875 | 1,260,000 |
1890 | 1,240,000 |
1905 | 1,900,000 |
1920 | 3,150,000 |
1935 | 4,480,000 |
1950 | 7,080,000 |
1965 | 10,780,000 |
1980 | 13,700,000 |
1995 | 15,400,000 |
2000 | 15,900,000 |
2005 | 16,600,000 |
2006 | 16,306,246 |
2007 | 16,266,920 |
2008 | 16,228,438 |
2009 | 16,160,088 |
2010 | 16,136,044 |
2011 | 15,978,112 |
2012 | 15,872,404 |
2013 | 15,735,640 |
2014 | 15,499,173 |
2015 | 15,294,764 |
2016 | 15,216,978 |
2017 | 15,005,638 |
2018 | 14,813,234 |
2019 | 14,525,579 |
2020 | 14,089,947 |
2021 | 13,680,493 |
2022 | 13,223,122 |
2023 | 12,982,090 |
According to a 2024 census published by the convention, the organization claimed 46,906 churches, 4,050,668 weekly worshippers, and 12,982,090 members.
The global convention has more than 1,161 local associations, 41 state conventions, and fellowships covering all 50 states and territories of the United States. The five U.S. states with the highest rates of membership are Texas, Georgia, North Carolina, Florida, and Tennessee. Texas has the largest number of members, with an estimated 2.75 million. Within Texas, these are divided among the more traditionalist Southern Baptists of Texas Convention and more moderate, diversified Baptist General Convention of Texas; the Baptist General Convention of Texas, or the Texas Baptists, are also more financially and organizationally autonomous from the primary convention in contrast to most state conventions.
Southern/Great Commission Baptists support thousands of missionaries in the United States and worldwide through the Cooperative Program.
Trends
Data from church sources and independent surveys indicate that since 1990 membership of Southern Baptist churches has declined as a proportion of the American population. Historically, the convention grew throughout its history until 2007, when membership decreased by a net figure of nearly 40,000 members. The total membership, of about 16.2 million, was flat over the same period, falling by 38,482 or 0.2%. An important indicator of the denomination's health is new baptisms, which have decreased yearly for seven of the last eight years. As of 2008, they had reached their lowest levels since 1987. Membership continued to decline from 2008 to 2012. The convention's statistical summary of 2014 recorded a loss of 236,467 members, their biggest one-year decline since 1881. In 2018, membership fell below 15 million for the first time since 1989 and reached its lowest level for over 30 years.
This decline in membership and baptisms has prompted some SBC researchers to describe the convention as a "denomination in decline". In 2008, former SBC president Frank Page suggested that if current conditions continue, half of all the convention's churches will close their doors permanently by 2030. A 2004 survey of SBC churches supported that assessment, finding that the membership of 70% of SBC churches is declining or has plateaued.
The decline in membership was discussed at the June 2008 Annual Convention. Curt Watke, a former researcher for the organization, noted four reasons for the decline of the church based on his research: the increase in immigration by non-European groups, decline in growth among predominantly European American (white) churches, the aging of the current membership, and a decrease in the proportion of younger generations participating in any church life. Some believe Baptists have not worked sufficiently to attract minorities.
On the other hand, the state conventions of Mississippi and Texas report an increasing proportion of minority members. In 1990, 5% of congregations were non-white. In 2012, the proportion of congregations of other ethnic groups (African American, Latino, and Asian) had increased to 20%. Sixty percent of the minority congregations were in Texas, particularly in the suburbs of Houston and Dallas. In 2020, an estimated 22.3% of affiliated churches were non-white.
The decline in SBC-GCB membership may be more pronounced than these statistics indicate because Baptist churches are not required to remove inactive members from their rolls, likely leading to greatly inflated membership numbers. In addition, hundreds of large, moderate congregations have shifted their primary allegiance to other Baptist groups, such as the American Baptist Churches USA, the Alliance of Baptists, or the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, but have continued to remain on the convention's books. Their members are thus counted in the convention's totals, although these churches no longer participate in the annual convention meetings or make more than the minimum financial contributions.
Groups have sometimes withdrawn from the convention because of its conservative trends. On November 6, 2000, the Baptist General Convention of Texas voted to cut its contributions to Southern Baptist seminaries and reallocate more than $5 million to three theological seminaries that members believed were more moderate. These included the Hispanic Baptist Theological School in San Antonio, Baylor University's George W. Truett Theological Seminary in Waco, and Hardin–Simmons University's Logsdon School of Theology in Abilene. Since the controversies of the 1980s, the convention has established more than 20 theological or divinity programs directed toward moderate and progressive Baptists in the Southeastern United States. In addition to Texas, the convention established schools in Virginia, Georgia, North Carolina, and Alabama in the 1990s. These include the Baptist Theological Seminary in Richmond, McAfee School of Theology of Mercer University in Atlanta, Wake Forest, Gardner Webb and Campbell Divinity schools in North Carolina, and Beeson Divinity School at Samford University. These schools contributed to the flat and declining enrollment at seminaries operating in the same region of the United States. Texas and Virginia have the largest state conventions identified as moderate in theological approach.
On June 4, 2020, the organization reported a drop in membership—the 13th consecutive year that membership declined. Total membership in the church fell almost 2% to 14,525,579 from 2018 to 2019. In 2022, the church lost another 457,371 members (the largest drop in over a century) to 13,223,122, a similar level as the late 1970s.
Organization
Main article: List of state and other conventions associated with the Southern Baptist ConventionThe denomination has four levels of organization: the local congregation, the local association, the state convention, and the national convention. There are 41 affiliated state conventions or fellowships.
The national and state conventions and local associations are cooperative associations by which churches can voluntarily pool resources to support missionary and other work. Because of the basic Baptist principle of the autonomy of the local church and the congregationalist polity of the denomination, neither the national convention nor the state conventions or local associations has any administrative or ecclesiastical control over local churches; such a group may disfellowship a local congregation over an issue, but may not terminate its leadership or members or force its closure. The national convention has no authority over state conventions or local associations, nor do state conventions have authority over local associations. Furthermore, no individual congregation has any authority over any other congregation; a church may oversee another congregation voluntarily as a mission work, but another congregation has the right to become an independent congregation at any time.
Article IV. Authority: While independent and sovereign in its own sphere, the Convention does not claim and will never attempt to exercise any authority over any other Baptist body, whether church, auxiliary organizations, associations, or convention.
The national convention maintains a central administrative organization in Nashville, Tennessee. Its executive committee exercises authority and control over seminaries and other institutions owned by the national convention.
The national convention had around 10,000 ethnic churches as of 2008. Commitment to the autonomy of local churches was the primary force behind its executive committee's rejection of a proposal to create a convention-wide database of clergy accused of sexual crimes against congregants or other minors in order to stop the "recurring tide" of clergy sexual abuse within affiliated congregations. A 2009 study by Lifeway Christian Resources, the convention's research and publishing arm, revealed that one in eight background checks for potential volunteer or church workers revealed a history of crime that could have prevented them from working.
The denominational statement of faith, the Baptist Faith and Message, is not binding on churches or members due to the autonomy of the local church (though national convention employees and missionaries must agree to its views as a condition of employment or missionary support). Politically and culturally, Southern/Great Commission Baptists tend to be conservative. Most oppose homosexual activity and abortion.
Pastor and deacon
Generally, Baptists recognize only two scriptural offices: pastor-teacher and deacon. The convention passed a resolution in the early 1980s officially restricting offices requiring ordination to men. According to the Baptist Faith and Message, the office of pastor is limited to men based on New Testament scriptures.
Annual meeting
The annual meeting (held in June over two days) consists of delegates (called "messengers") from cooperating churches. The messengers confer, determine the convention's programs, policies, and budget, and elect the officers and committees. Each cooperating church is allowed up to two messengers regardless of the amount given to convention entities and may have more depending on the amount of contributions (in dollars or percent of the church's budget), but the maximum number of messengers permitted from any church is 12.
Missions and affiliated organizations
Cooperative Program
The Cooperative Program (CP) is the organization's unified funds collection and distribution program for the support of regional, national, and international ministries; contributions from affiliated congregations fund the CP.
In the fiscal year ending September 30, 2008, the local congregations of the denomination reported gift receipts of $11.1 billion. From this they sent $548 million, approximately five percent, to their state Baptist conventions through the CP. Of this amount, the state Baptist conventions retained $344 million for their work. State conventions sent $204 million to the national CP budget to support denomination-wide ministries.
Mission agencies
The denomination was organized in 1845 to create a mission board to support the sending of Baptist missionaries. The North American Mission Board, or NAMB, (founded as the Domestic Mission Board, and later the Home Mission Board) in Alpharetta, Georgia serves missionaries involved in evangelism and church planting in the U.S. and Canada, while the International Mission Board, or IMB, (originally the Foreign Mission Board) in Richmond, Virginia, sponsors missionaries to the rest of the world.
Baptist Men is the mission organization for men in the convention's churches and is under the North American Mission Board.
The Woman's Missionary Union, founded in 1888, is an auxiliary to the national convention, which helps facilitate two large annual missions offerings: the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering (for North American missions) and the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering (for international missions).
Southern Baptist Disaster Relief
Among the more visible organizations within the North American Mission Board is Southern Baptist Disaster Relief. In 1967, a small group of Texas Southern Baptist volunteers helped victims of Hurricane Beulah by serving hot food cooked on small "buddy burners". In 2005, volunteers responded to 166 named disasters, prepared 17,124,738 meals, repaired 7,246 homes, and removed debris from 13,986 yards. Southern Baptist Disaster Relief provides many different types: food, water, child care, communication, showers, laundry, repairs, rebuilding, or other essential tangible items that contribute to the resumption of life following the crisis—and the message of the Gospel. All assistance is provided to individuals and communities free of charge. SBC DR volunteer kitchens prepare much of the food distributed by the Red Cross in major disasters.
Southern Baptist Association of Christian Schools
The SBC has various primary and secondary schools affiliated with the Southern Baptist Association of Christian Schools.
Universities and colleges
Main article: List of universities and colleges affiliated with the Southern Baptist ConventionThe SBC has several affiliated universities.
Seminaries
The national convention directly supports six theological seminaries devoted to ministry preparation.
- Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, Kentucky (1859, originally in Greenville, South Carolina)
- Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Fort Worth, Texas (1908, originally part of Baylor University in Waco, Texas).
- New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, New Orleans, Louisiana (1916, originally New Orleans Baptist Bible Institute)
- Gateway Seminary, Ontario, California (1944, initially in Oakland, California, and formerly called Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary)
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, Wake Forest, North Carolina (1950)
- Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Kansas City, Missouri (1957)
Other organizations
Other notable organizations under the national convention include Baptist Press, the nation's largest Christian news service, established by the convention in 1946; Baptist Collegiate Network, the college-level organization operating campus and international missions typically known as the Baptist Student Union and Baptist Collegiate Ministries; GuideStone Financial Resources (formerly called the Annuity Board of the Southern Baptist Convention, and founded in 1918 as the Relief Board of the Southern Baptist Convention), which provides insurance, retirement, and investment services to churches, ministers, and employees of affiliated churches and agencies (it does not limit its services to member churches and members); LifeWay Christian Resources, founded as the Baptist Sunday School Board in 1891, one of the nation's largest Christian publishing houses, which previously operated the "LifeWay Christian Stores" (formerly "Baptist Book Stores") until closing physical stores in 2019; Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission (formerly known as the Christian Life Commission of the SBC), dedicated to addressing social and moral concerns and their implications on public policy issues from city hall to Congress and the courts; and the Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives, in Nashville, Tennessee, the official depository for the denomination's archives and a research center for the study of Baptists worldwide. The SBHLA website includes digital resources.
Controversies
From its establishment to the present day, the organization has experienced several periods of major internal controversy.
Landmark controversy
In the 1850s–1860s, a group of young activists called for a return to certain early practices, or what they called Landmarkism. Other leaders disagreed with their assertions, and the Baptist congregations became split on the issues. Eventually, the disagreements led to the formation of Gospel Missions and the American Baptist Association (1924), as well as many unaffiliated independent churches. One historian called the related James Robinson Graves—Robert Boyte Crawford Howell controversy (1858–60) the greatest to affect the denomination before that of the late 20th century involving the fundamentalist-moderate break.
Whitsitt controversy
In the Whitsitt controversy of 1896–99, William H. Whitsitt, a professor at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, suggested that contrary to earlier thought, English Baptists did not begin to baptize by immersion until 1641, when some Anabaptists, as they were then called, began to practice immersion. This went against the idea of immersion, which was the practice of the earliest Baptists, as some Landmarkists contended.
American Civil War
Further information: Southern Baptist Convention § Increasing diversity and policy changesDuring the 19th and most of the 20th century, the organization, reflecting Southern attitudes toward politics, supported white supremacy, racial segregation, the Confederacy, and the Lost Cause. The organization also denounced interracial marriage as an "abomination", falsely citing the Bible. Beginning in the late 1970s, a conservative movement began to take control of the organization. By the 1990s, this movement succeeded in taking control of the SBC leadership. In 1995, it officially denounced racism and its white supremacist history. In the 21st century, after the election of its first black president, the SBC adopted the "Great Commission Baptists" descriptor, which gained prominent use among several churches that wished to sever themselves from its white supremacist history and controversies. By 2008, almost 20% of SBC congregations were majority African American, Asian, Hispanic, or Latino, reflecting the denomination's increased racial diversity. SBC-cooperating churches had an estimated one million African American members. By 2018, the denomination had passed resolutions that recommended gaining more black members and appointing more African American leaders.
Moderates–conservatives controversy
The Southern Baptist Convention conservative resurgence (c. 1970–2000) was an intense struggle for control of the national convention's resources and ideological direction.
In July 1961, Professor Ralph Elliott at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Kansas City published The Message of Genesis, a book rejecting biblical inerrancy. In the 1970s, other convention seminary professors came under suspicion of liberal Christianity.
In response to these events, a group of pastors led by Judge Paul Pressler and Pastor Paige Patterson campaigned at conferences in churches for a more conservative direction in Convention policies. This group's candidate, Adrian Rogers, was elected Convention president at the 1979 annual meeting. After the election, the organization's new leaders replaced all Southern Baptist agency leaders with people who said they were more conservative. Its initiators called it a "Southern Baptist Convention conservative resurgence", while its moderate opponents called it a "fundamentalist takeover".
Russell H. Dilday, president of the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary from 1978 to 1994, said the resurgence fragmented Southern Baptist fellowship and was "far more serious than ", calling it as "a self-destructive, contentious, one-sided feud that at times took on combative characteristics". Since 1979, Southern Baptists had become polarized into two major groups: moderates and conservatives. Reflecting the conservative majority votes of messengers at the 1979 annual meeting of the SBC, the new national organization officers replaced all leaders of Southern Baptist agencies with presumably more conservative people (often dubbed "fundamentalist" by dissenters).
In 1984, this group was heavily involved in passing a resolution excluding women from pastoral leadership.
In 1987, a group of churches criticized the fundamentalists for controlling the leadership and founded the Alliance of Baptists. A group of moderate churches criticized the denomination for the same reasons, as well as opposition to women's ministry, and founded the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship in 1991.
In 2019, after the scandals of sexual abuse accusations involving the deacon Paul Pressler and sexual abuse cover-ups involving former president Paige Patterson, the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary removed the stained-glass windows from the MacGorman Chapel opened in 2011 depicting them as actors of a "conservative resurgence".
LGBTQ
Since 1992, the national convention has "disfellowshipped" various churches that support LGBTQ inclusion. In 2018, the District of Columbia Baptist Convention was disfellowshipped for this reason.
Critical race theory
By November 2020, the six convention seminary presidents called critical race theory "unbiblical". They emphasized the importance of not turning to secular ideas to confront racism. Four African American churches left the SBC over the leadership's charged statement on the issue.
See also
- List of Baptist denominations
- List of Southern Baptist Convention affiliated people
- List of the largest Protestant denominations
- Evangelicalism in the United States
- Southern Baptist Convention Presidents
- Christian views on slavery
- Christianity in the United States
- Religion in the United States
Notes
- The era of conservative resurgence was accompanied by the erosion of more-liberal members (see, e.g., G. Avery Lee).
References
Footnotes
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Christ's people should, as occasion requires, organize such associations and conventions as may best secure cooperation for the great objects of the Kingdom of God. Such organizations have no authority over one another or over the churches. They are voluntary and advisory bodies designed to elicit, combine, and direct the energies of our people in the most effective manner.
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- Bob Allen, Seminary removes stained glass windows celebrating conservative takeover of SBC, baptistnews.com, USA, April 12, 2019
- Yawn, Andrew J. "A Georgia church, removed from the SBC for allowing gay members, wants to make sure 'everybody's welcome'". USA TODAY. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
- Roach, David (May 22, 2018). "SBC Ends Relationship with DC Convention". Baptist Press. Southern Baptist Convention. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
- Michael Gryboski, Southern Baptist seminary presidents release statement denouncing critical race theory, christianpost.com, USA, December 01, 2020
- "Several Black pastors break with the Southern Baptist Convention over a statement on race". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
Bibliography
- Beeman, Richard R. (1978). "Social Change and Cultural Conflict in Virginia: Lunenburg County, 1746 to 1774". William and Mary Quarterly. 35 (3): 455–76. doi:10.2307/1921659. JSTOR 1921659.
- Brooks, Walter H. (1922). "The Evolution of the Negro Baptist Church". Journal of Negro History. 7 (1): 11–22. doi:10.2307/2713578. JSTOR 2713578. S2CID 149662445.
- Dilday, Russell (2007). Higher Ground: A Call for Christian Civility. Macon, Georgia: Smyth & Helwys Publishing. ISBN 978-1-57312-469-0.
- Early, Joseph Jr., ed. (2008). Readings in Baptist History: Four Centuries of Selected Documents. Nashville, Tennessee: B&H Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8054-4674-6.
- Finn, Nathan A. (2010). "Southern Baptist History: A Great Commission Reading". In Lawless, Chuck; Greenway, Adam W. (eds.). The Great Commission Resurgence: Fulfilling God's Mandate in Our Time. Nashville, Tennessee: B&H Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-4336-7216-3.
- Hefley, James C. (1991). The Truth in Crisis. Volume 6: The Conservative Resurgence in the Southern Baptist Convention. Hannibal, Missouri: Hannibal Books. ISBN 978-0-929292-19-9.
- Heyrman, Christine Leigh (1998). Southern Cross: The Beginning of the Bible Belt. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press.
- Hankins, Barry (2002). Uneasy in Babylon: Southern Baptist Conservatives and American Culture. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-5081-9.
- Humphreys, Fisher (2002). The Way We Were: How Southern Baptist Theology Has Changed and What It Means to Us All. Macon, Georgia: Smyth & Helwys. ISBN 978-1-57312-376-1.
- Isaac, Rhys (1974). "Evangelical Revolt: The Nature of the Baptists' Challenge to the Traditional Order in Virginia, 1765 to 1775". William and Mary Quarterly. 31 (3): 345–68. doi:10.2307/1921628. JSTOR 1921628.
- James, Robison B.; Jackson, Barbara; Shepherd, Robert E. Jr.; Showalter, Cornelia (2006). The Fundamentalist Takeover in the Southern Baptist Convention: A Brief History (PDF) (4th ed.). Washington, Georgia: Wilkes Publishing Company. Archived (PDF) from the original on November 4, 2009. Retrieved October 15, 2016.
- Johnson, Robert E. (2010). A Global Introduction to Baptist Churches. Cambridge University Press. p. 349. ISBN 978-1-139-78898-4.
- Kolchin, Peter (1993). American Slavery, 1619–1877. New York: Hill & Wang. ISBN 978-0-8090-2568-8.
- Kroll-Smith, J. Stephen (1984). "Transmitting a Revival Culture: The Organizational Dynamic of the Baptist Movement in Colonial Virginia, 1760–1777". Journal of Southern History. 50 (4): 551–68. doi:10.2307/2208472. JSTOR 2208472.
- McBeth, H. Leon (1987). The Baptist Heritage: Four Centuries of Baptist Witness. Nashville, Tennessee: Broadman Press. ISBN 978-0-8054-6569-3.
- Miller, Randall M.; Smith, John David, eds. (1997). Dictionary of Afro-American Slavery (2nd ed.). Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-275-95799-5.
- Morris, Aldon D.; Lee, Shayne (2005). "The National Baptist Convention: Traditions and Contemporary Challenges" (PDF). In Roozen, David A.; Nieman, James R. (eds.). Church, Identity, and Changes: Theology and Denominational Structures in Unsettled Times. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. pp. 336–379. ISBN 978-0-8028-2819-4. Archived (PDF) from the original on September 6, 2015. Retrieved October 25, 2016.
- Priest, Kersten Bayt; Priest, Robert J. (2007). "Divergent Worship Practices in the Sunday Morning Hour: Analysis of an 'Interracial' Church Merger Attempt". In Priest, Robert J.; Nieves, Alvaro L. (eds.). This Side of Heaven: Race, Ethnicity, and Christian Faith. Oxford University Press. pp. 275–292. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195310566.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-531056-6.
- Priest, Robert J.; Nieves, Alvaro L., eds. (2007). "Appendix I: Timeline: Race and Ethnicity in the United States". This Side of Heaven: Race, Ethnicity, and Christian Faith. Oxford University Press. pp. 335–339. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195310566.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-531056-6.
- Raboteau, Albert J. (2004). Slave Religion: The "Invisible Institution" in the Antebellum South (updated ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-517413-7.
- Taylor, James B. (1859). Virginia Baptist Ministers. Vol. 1. New York: Sheldon and Company. Retrieved October 15, 2016.
- Tull, James E. (2000). High-Church Baptists in the South: The Origin, Nature, and Influence of Landmarkism (rev. ed.). Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press. ISBN 978-0-86554-705-6.
Further reading
- Ammerman, Nancy (1990), Baptist Battles: Social Change and Religious Conflict in the Southern Baptist Convention, Rutgers University Press.
- ——— , ed. (1993), Southern Baptists Observed, University of Tennessee Press.
- Baker, Robert, ed. (1966), A Baptist Source Book, Nashville, TN: Broadman.
- ——— (1974), The Southern Baptist Convention and Its People, 1607–1972, Broadman.
- Barnes, William. The Southern Baptist Convention, 1845–1953 Broadman Press, 1954.
- Eighmy, John. Churches in Cultural Captivity: A History of the Social Attitudes of Southern Baptists. University of Tennessee Press, 1972.
- Encyclopedia of Southern Baptists: Presenting Their History, Doctrine, Polity, Life, Leadership, Organization & Work Knoxville: Broadman Press, v 1–2 (1958), 1500 pp; 2 supplementary volumes 1958 and 1962; vol 5. Index, 1984
- Farnsley II, Arthur Emery, Southern Baptist Politics: Authority and Power in the Restructuring of an American Denomination; Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994
- Flowers, Elizabeth H. Into the Pulpit: Southern Baptist Women and Power Since World War II (University of North Carolina Press; 2012) 263 pages; examines women's submission to male authority as a pivotal issue in the clash between conservatives and moderates in the SBC
- Fuller, A. James. Chaplain to the Confederacy: Basil Manly and Baptist Life in the Old South (2002)
- Gatewood, Willard. Controversy in the 1920s: Fundamentalism, Modernism, and Evolution. Vanderbilt University Press, 1969.
- Harvey, Paul. Redeeming the South: Religious Cultures and Racial Identities among Southern Baptists, 1865–1925. University of North Carolina Press, 1997
- Hill, Samuel, et al. Encyclopedia of Religion in the South (2005)
- Hunt, Alma. Woman's Missionary Union (1964) Online free
- Kell, Carl L. and L. Raymond Camp, In the Name of the Father: The Rhetoric of the New Southern Baptist Convention. Southern Illinois University Press, 1999.
- Kidd, Thomas S. and Barry Hankins. Baptists in America: A History. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 2015.
- Leonard, Bill J. God's Last and Only Hope: The Fragmentation of the Southern Baptist Convention. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1990.
- Lumpkin, William L. Baptist History in the South: Tracing through the Separates the Influence of the Great Awakening, 1754–1787 (1995)
- McSwain, Larry L. Loving Beyond Your Theology: The Life and Ministry of Jimmy Raymond Allen (Mercer University Press; 2010) 255 pages. A biography of the Arkansas-born pastor (b. 1927), who was the last moderate president of the SBC
- Marsden, George. Fundamentalism and American Culture: The Shaping of 20th Century Evangelicalism. Oxford University Press, 1980.
- Religious Congregations & Membership in the United States, Glenmary Research Center, 2000.
- Rosenberg, Ellen (1989), The Southern Baptists: A Subculture in Transition, University of Tennessee Press.
- Scales, T. Laine. All That Fits a Woman: Training Southern Baptist Women for Charity and Mission, 1907–1926 Mercer U. Press 2002
- Smith, Oran P. The Rise of Baptist Republicanism (1997), on recent voting behavior
- Spain, Rufus B. At Ease in Zion: A Social History of Southern Baptists, 1865–1900 (1961)
- Sutton, Jerry. The Baptist Reformation: The Conservative Resurgence in the Southern Baptist Convention (2000).
- Wills, Gregory A. Democratic Religion: Freedom, Authority, and Church Discipline in the Baptist South, 1785–1900. Oxford University Press, 1997
- Yarnell III, Malcolm B. The Formation of Christian Doctrine (2007), on Baptist theology
External links
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