Opinion: The SBC has bad, sexist theology. Of course bad culture follows. [View all]
Source: Washington Post
Opinion: The SBC has bad, sexist theology. Of course bad culture follows.
Opinion by David Von Drehle
Columnist
June 11, 2021 at 6:36 p.m. EDT
Years ago, I lived in New York City and attended Grace Church, a historic Episcopal parish on Broadway at 10th Street. The beauty of the Gothic-style building was matched by the glorious choir. Yet the most memorable aspect of the experience was the frequent preaching of the Rev. Fleming Rutledge, who is regarded as one of the most intelligent pulpit presences in Christendom.
It did not do to contemplate the lovely stained glass while Rutledge was speaking. You had to pay close attention to every word. An analysis of Scripture in the fourth minute of the sermon could hold the key that unlocked everything 20 intricate minutes later. Here was a great mind harnessed to a deep faith to create a CrossFit for the soul.
I mention that wonderful experience as a way of introducing the latest controversy inside the Southern Baptist Convention. Internal letters and secret recordings leaked in recent days suggest that the nations largest (though dwindling) Protestant denomination has not come to grips with the problem of sexually predatory pastors.
That failing cannot be separated, it seems to me, from the theological sexism at the top of the SBC. When the convention holds its annual meeting this week, a key bit of business will be the reaffirmation of a doctrine euphemistically called complementarianism. It holds that even so great a preacher as Fleming Rutledge is an abomination on account of the fact that Fleming Rutledge is a woman.
Mike Stone, former chairman of the SBC executive committee and a leading candidate for the denomination presidency, is a firm proponent of complementarianism, which says men and women have separate roles, and men are the ones in charge. Among the nearly 800,000 words in the Bible, one sentence seems to contain Stones thinking on this matter. Its from a letter the Apostle Paul wrote to his protege, Timothy: I do not permit a woman to teach or to exercise authority over a man; rather, she is to remain quiet.
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