“Truth
alone will endure.
All the rest will be swept away before the tide of time.”
--
Gandhi
Today,
I send a heartfelt thank-you to Amy Smith, Miguel Prats and Pam Palmer, who
stood together outside the convention center in Houston while Southern Baptist
delegates convened this past week. Their presence served as a testimony to the
truth about the extent of the clergy abuse problem among Southern Baptists and to
the truth about how poorly the denomination is dealing with the problem. Below
is the statement that was made there by Amy Smith.
Pam Palmer and Amy Smith |
"We are
here today to protect kids. For far too long, SBC church officials have
remained silent on what we believe to be
a systemic problem of inappropriate and dangerous responses within Southern
Baptist churches when Baptist clergy are
credibly accused of child sexual abuse.
"Church
staff and members often immediately and even publicly rally around an accused
child molester instead of keeping an
open mind and urging anyone with information to come forward. Then, victims, witnesses and whistleblowers are intimidated or
frightened and stay silent, many times, for decades. As a result, all too often, those who commit and
conceal child sex crimes walk free, remain hidden and hurt others.
"This
ought not to be. All children and their parents in our churches and communities
deserve our utmost transparency and
truthfulness. It is the light of truth and knowledge that is our
greatest tool to protect kids.
"We urge
the SBC to wait no longer and today decide to leave behind the status quo of
silence and worn-out, weak and cowardly excuse
of Baptist polity and autonomous church structure that keeps officials from cooperatively addressing the issue of child
sexual abuse within SBC churches and subsequent cover-ups of that abuse by the failure to immediately report any
knowledge or suspicion of abuse to law enforcement authorities.
Miguel Prats and Pam Palmer |
"We have
asked for a chance to address the annual SBC meeting to discuss how church
staff and members should respond when
allegations of clergy sex crimes and cover ups surface.
"Christa
Brown of Stop Baptist Predators writes,
'The requests are nothing radical. We asked for the
sorts of safeguards that already exist in
other
major faith
groups in this country. We asked that the
denomination provide (1) a safe place where people may report abusive ministers, (2) a denominational panel
for responsibly assessing abuse reports (particularly those that cannot be criminally prosecuted), and (3)
an effective means, such as a database, of assuring that assessment information reaches people in the
pews.'
"Most critically, pastors should be expected to
clearly follow mandatory reporting laws and report suspected child abuse to the police immediately. Any
pastors who have not done so should be held accountable and urged to do
the right thing to protect kids from more harm from accused clergy who have been shuffled off to other unsuspecting
churches, as in the case of former Prestonwood Baptist minister John Langworthy, a confessed child molester
and recently convicted sex offender in Mississippi.
"Certainly,
any pastors accused of failing to report and covering up child abuse should not
be held up as models. They should be
chastised.
"A civil
lawsuit by 11 plaintiffs accuses C. J. Mahaney of Sovereign Grace Ministries of
refusing to report suspected child sex
crimes to the police. Two prominent SBC pastors, Al Mohler and Mark Dever have expressed public support for Mahaney.
"Church
officials who SNAP considers to have acted inappropriately regarding the
Prestonwood Baptist Church / Langworthy
child sex abuse case include Dr. Jack Graham, past president of the SBC, and
Neal Jeffrey, associate pastor at
Prestonwood."
________________________________
"Pastor implicated in sex abuse scandal is back," Religion Dispatches, 11/24/13 (with link to the lawsuit pleadings)
________________________________
"Pastor implicated in sex abuse scandal is back," Religion Dispatches, 11/24/13 (with link to the lawsuit pleadings)