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Southern Baptist Executive Committee Agrees to a Resolution with Jennifer Lyell

By Bob Smietana
sexual abuse survivors
A woman holds signs about abuse during a rally outside the annual meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention on June 11, 2019, in Birmingham, Ala. (RNS photo by Butch Dill)

Southern Baptist leaders announced Tuesday that they had reached a resolution with a sexual abuse survivor whose story was mishandled when she came forward in 2019. 

Jennifer Lyell, a former publishing executive for Lifeway Christian Resources, told Baptist Press in 2019 that she had experienced abuse for years at the hands of a former Southern Baptist seminary professor. She made her story public out of concerns her abuser was still in ministry outside the Southern Baptist Convention.

Instead, the abuse was characterized in a news story as a “morally inappropriate relationship.” As a result of the backlash from that news story — for which Baptist Press, the official SBC news service, later apologized —Lyell lost her reputation, her job and her health. 

Pastor Rolland Slade, chairman of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Executive Committee, announced the resolution and an apology to Lyell during an afternoon meeting. The Lyell resolution was approved by the entire committee.

“The SBC Executive Committee acknowledges its failure to adequately listen, protect and care for Jennifer Lyell when she came forward to share her story of abuse by a seminary professor. Baptist Press failed to accurately report the sexual abuse Jennifer Lyell reported to two SBC entities and local Southern Baptist churches,” Slade said in a statement Tuesday.

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“The SBC Executive Committee acknowledges its failures to Ms. Lyell, including the unintentional harm created by its failure to report Ms. Lyell’s allegations of nonconsensual sexual abuse were investigated and unequivocally corroborated by the SBC entities with authority over Ms. Lyell and her abuser. The SBC Executive Committee apologizes for all the hurt it has caused, is grateful for Ms. Lyell’s perseverance and engagement, and prays for her complete healing from the trauma she has endured,” he said.

Jennifer Lyell
Jennifer Lyell (Courtesy Photo)

Lyell said in 2021 that she wished she had never gone public about her abuse. Instead of receiving support and compassion, she found herself trying to convince critics she was not responsible for the abuse she had experienced.

“It takes years and years to recover from trauma, and no one should be in the position of having to explain it to the whole public while they’re still trying to do that,” she said at the time. 

The Executive Committee’s treatment of Lyell had long been a concern for abuse advocates. Baptist leaders were criticized in 2019 at a Caring Well conference organized by the SBC’s Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission for failing to make things right with Lyell. That led to backlash from former leaders of the Executive Committee. 

Lyell said in a statement Tuesday that she had connected with Slade in the fall of 2021 about her ongoing dispute with the Executive Committee and potential legal claims. She met with attorneys for the Executive Committee and also shared her discussions with the Executive Committee as part of the Guidepost Solutions investigation into how the committee has responded to abuse in the past. She also acknowledged the pain and suffering of other abuse survivors who have not experienced the kind of resolution she has from the SBC.

In her statement, Lyell thanked Slade and other Executive Committee officers and members, as well as their attorneys, for taking action. She also accepted the committee’s apologies and thanked former Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission President Russell Moore and his wife, Maria, as well as attorney and abuse advocate Rachael Denhollander, for their friendship and support.

“As I’ve shared with those to whom I’ve been able to speak and to their lawyers, although this by no means restores what I’ve lost, I am grateful because it is the only action I could imagine that may at least make the ongoing damage stop,” she said. “My focus will now turn to my health and trying to build a future.”

https://twitter.com/jenlyell/status/1496224760019226628?s=20&t=jnuB9rf7dMy0yPM8rMf0wA

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

 

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4 Responses

  1. Why is the seminary professor not named? What is he doing now? Why is there no civil or criminal proceedings going against the abuser and against the officials who blamed the victim?

  2. A one minute web search will provide you with the professor’s name.

    And of course as always there are statutes of limitations on grooming and sexual abuse cases.

    When victims come forward years later after being sexually groomed by a professor or pastor, we need for Christian leadership to stop referring to these as affairs or immoral relationships. Clearly the individuals involved are not on level playing ground.

    Praying that this usher in a sea change on how these situations are understood going forward.

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