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Bart Barber Elected President of Southern Baptist Convention in Runoff Election

By Adelle Banks
bart barber SBC
Texas pastor Bart Barber preaches at Huntington Beach Church in Huntington Beach, California, on June 13, 2022. (RNS photo by Adelle M. Banks)

Bart Barber, the longtime pastor of a small Texas church and a frequent leader of prominent Southern Baptist committees, has been elected the next president of the nation’s largest Protestant denomination.

Barber, 52, received 61% of the votes in the second round of voting at the annual meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention on Tuesday evening, defeating Florida pastor Tom Ascol in a runoff election.

The First Baptist Church of Farmersville pastor received a plurality of the votes in an earlier election on Tuesday afternoon but without a clear majority winner, the election went into a run off. Tuesday’s election eliminated missionary expert Robin Hadaway, who received 5% of the vote, and Frank Cox, a Georgia pastor nominated in the final hours of the race, who received 13%. Ascol, a vocal critic of what he considers a liberal drift in the SBC, received 34% in the first election while Barber won 48%.

Barber succeeds Alabama pastor Ed Litton, who chose not to pursue a traditional second one-year term. Litton, who apologized early in his presidency for plagiarizing portions of several sermons by former SBC President J.D. Greear, has said he plans to expand his focus on racial reconciliation.

The election was one of the closely watched aspects of the two-day meeting, during which messengers, or delegates, have also addressed proposed recommendations after an independent investigation revealed SBC Executive Committee leaders mishandled allegations of sexual abuse for decades.

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In a sermon on Sunday at nearby Huntington Beach Church, Barber said 60% of the women in couples he had met with for premarital counseling reported previously experiencing sexual abuse.

“That’s something that is not just an isolated matter, or just the clergy or just the churches, or just a few churches in the Southern Baptist Convention,” he said. “The fact of the matter is, statisticians tell us, that whether it was at home, whether it was at school, whether it was at the doctor, whether it was an athletic program, that as many as 1 in 4 of the women who are in this room will experience sexual abuse at some point in their life.”

Staffers at Barber’s own congregation intervened and contacted authorities when they were concerned a now-removed member might be grooming teen members. The man later admitted to molesting the teens when they worked for him, and he served prison time after pleading guilty to child indecency and sexual assault.

Barber told Religion News Service that he later heard from a Dallas man who told Barber he’d been molested by the same perpetrator earlier in another state “in conjunction with a Christian ministry.” That ministry was aware of the incident, but no charges were filed.

“This experience has solidified in me what was, previously, a set of best practices we employed as a defense against what was a theoretical threat (somebody someday might try to abuse someone here in Farmersville),” he told RNS in an email message. “We now know firsthand the harm that can come to people when predators are not reported, prosecuted and registered as offenders.”

Prior to the annual meeting, Barber said he agreed with the proposal of the sexual abuse task force to hire a national staff person who would receive reports of abuse allegations and determine what church or other SBC entity should respond to them.

“(T)he idea that we would look and say, ‘We need somebody who really understands the perspective of survivors of sexual abuse,’ that seems to be something that’s in line with actions we’ve taken in the past,” he said.

Barber has held numerous leadership roles in the denomination, including first vice president of the SBC. He also was a trustee of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary when it ousted Paige Patterson as president after reports surfaced of Patterson’s mishandling of rape allegations in a previous job.

Patterson was fired at first and given a salary and housing as president emeritus. Barber and other board members stripped him of that title — a move Barber defended from the floor of that year’s SBC annual meeting.

Barber was a member of the 2021 SBC resolutions committee and chairs this year’s committee, which received 29 proposed statements and must review, edit or augment those for consideration by the messengers. Though resolutions are nonbinding representations of the views of the messengers at a particular convention, they have been the source of heated discussion about issues such as abortion and critical race theory.

With more than 14,000 followers on Twitter, Barber has used the social media platform to outline some of his views, retweet those who have supported his campaign and tell tales about work on his “Unmerited” ranch, with Santa Gertrudis cattle in the background of videos he’s posted.

He has also tweeted about a recent visit with his ailing mother.

At Huntington Beach Church, he explained he had good reason for dressing less casually than the sandals- and sneakers-wearing crowd at the church a few miles away from the Pacific Ocean.

“I know that I have violated probably California Penal Code by wearing a tie to a meeting like this but they tell us that that my mom’s in the last weeks of her life due to Alzheimer’s and she loves her preacher boy in a tie and blue is her favorite color,” he said. “And when I show up dressed like this sometimes she knows who I am. And so I’m wearing this in honor of her today.”

Bob Smietana contributed to this report.

Adelle Banks is production editor and a national correspondent at Religion News Service.

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13 Responses

  1. Not mentioned in the article, from The Tennessan-
    Barber, pastor of First Baptist Church in Farmersville, Texas, on the other hand, does not identify as an abortion abolitionist. Instead, he identifies as an “incrementalist,” or the prohibition of abortion through a step-by-step process.

    Unlike Ascol, Barber does not think the problem of a “liberal drift” in the SBC is as serious of an issue as Ascol and allies have stated.

    1. Both of these are definitely in his favor. There is no “liberal drift” in the SBC. There is probably a pronounced “Trumpian drift” that can easily border on idolatry because you cannot serve Christ and Trump at the same time. Moreover so-called “abortion abolitionism” means that a woman who experienced a potentially life-threatening problem caused by pregnancy cannot receive an abortion to save her life. That is horrid and certainly not pro-life in any sense of the term.

      1. Bob Mayer,

        Nobody even on the “extreme” right would outlaw abortions for clear medical emergencies such as ectopic pregnancies. If we are talking about partial-birth abortion… then any reputable OB/GYN would DELIVER the late-term fetus which is often viable, and thereby save the woman. Let’s get rid of these nonsensical fake news talking points now. Nobody is proposing what you fear.

      1. Tom Parker,

        Nothing stops you and the like-minded from founding an abortion-affirming, LGBT-behavior-affirming church or denomination. Many people have.

        The question is why you feel the insatiable compulsion to force this platform onto preexisting denominations who do not want that.

  2. The SBC is hopelessly lost to progressive Gnosticism. We need a faithful remnant to split off as the PCA did with the PCUSA.

    1. It would be great to see the CBN and those like minded to split off, but they should receive $0 from the SBC. They can go and be faithful on their own dime.

      1. Tom Parker,

        I’m not necessarily opposed to that. However, what’s good for the goose is good for the gander.

        I’d like to see for people pay for abortions and reassignments on their own dime (especially if minors). That’s a radical position in 2022, but to me it seems like common sense.

        Yes that’s a deliberate tangent right here and now, but if we’re going to have fiscal austerity, let’s have it for all and in all circumstances.

        1. Brian, your point is well made. Maybe the two opposing parties in the SBC can find a fair way to share assets and then go their separate ways.

  3. Ohhh how wonderful. You finally acknowledge abusing people and bullying people is a bad thing. And you plan to make a monument for the abused. Oh how 21st century of you. And I’m sure all the damage done to the abused will all be forgotten. Thoughts and prayers thoughts and prayers. But remember what lawyer knott said that protecting the abused could be bad. See Julie Roys’ 06022022 article.

    1. Your words taste of bitterness and anger. It does not make for an opinion that convinces me, for one.

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