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Church Places Matt Queen, Former SBC Seminary Leader, On Leave After Federal Charges

By Bob Smietana
queen SWBTS
Matt Queen in a video for Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in November 2022. (Video screen grab)

A North Carolina Baptist church has suspended its pastor after he was indicted on allegations of giving false records to the FBI.

Matt Queen, a former professor and administrator at Southwest Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas, was charged by the U.S. Department of Justice last week with attempting to interfere with a grand jury investigation into the Southern Baptist Convention’s handling of sexual abuse.

He has pleaded not guilty and denied any wrongdoing.

Queen is pastor of Friendly Avenue Baptist Church in Greensboro, North Carolina, a role he was named to in February, but on Monday, Friendly Avenue said Queen had been placed on administrative leave. He has not preached since May 19, the Sunday before his indictment was announced by DOJ. 

“The actions alleged in the indictment oppose the moral values of Friendly Avenue Baptist Church, and we condemn all forms of sexual abuse,” the church said in a statement. “Dr. Queen has committed to resolve this matter responsibly, and we support his full cooperation with the authorities. To this end, Dr. Queen is on administrative leave from his pastoral responsibilities. He will step away to devote his attention to his family and to assist authorities in their inquiry.”

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friendly ave baptist church
Friendly Avenue Baptist Church in Greensboro, North Carolina. (Video screengrab)

Few details have been made public about the federal government’s two-year-old investigation into the SBC, which began after the release of a report by the third-party investigation firm Guidepost that showed that denominational leaders had mistreated abuse survivors for years and sought to downplay the extent of abuse in the nation’s largest Protestant denomination.

SBC leaders pledged to cooperate fully with federal law enforcement. As part of the investigation, SBC entities such as Southwestern seminary were required to report any case of abuse to the Department of Justice. However, when a student was arrested on allegations of sexual abuse in the fall of 2023, the seminary reported the incident to police but not the FBI.

When a seminary staffer subsequently wrote a report noting that the FBI had not been notified, a seminary leader allegedly told the staffer to destroy the report. Queen allegedly was at the meeting when this conversation took place but told the FBI he had not heard any comment about destroying the document. He produced notes to that effect, which the FBI claims had been faked.

 Queen did tell a grand jury that he heard a seminary leader say the document should be destroyed, according to the DOJ.

“The notes prepared by Dr. Queen cited in the accusation were true to his best recollection and did not contain false information,” said Sam Schmidt, Queen’s attorney, in a statement. “Dr. Queen testified truthfully before the Grand Jury.”

Southwestern seminary said that Queen was suspended after the school learned of his alleged actions. The school has also stated that all employees involved in the allegations in the DOJ indictment are no longer with the school. No other DOJ charges have been filed in this case.

Bob SmietanaBob Smietana is a national reporter for Religion News Service.

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2 Responses

  1. The latest issue of The New Yorker has an article about how 3M covered up its knowledge of forever chemicals the company created and helped spread. We all have these chemicals in our bloodstreams, thanks to company executives keeping the rest of us in the dark for decades.

    We’ve read how church people have covered up all sorts of things. Does that say anything about how people tend to “go along to get along,” regardless of where they are? Why should we trust clergy and others that make a living from religion?

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